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                  <text>1o- The Daily Sentinel

Governor has no clemency plans
DAYTON, Ohio (API - Gov.
James A. Rhodes, saying it should
lie up to communities to decide
whether to pardon a convicted killer,
has no plans to grant clemency to
anyone sentenced to death under
Ohio's new capital punishment law.
" That's old-fashioned for a governor to act as a court Of laSt resort, "
Rhodes said Sunday as he signed a
bill reinstating the death penalty for
certain aggravated murders . " No
one knows when the bullet will strike
next."
The governor's action took place
before abOut :&gt;.50 Jaw enforcement officers at a meeting of the Ohio
Fraternal Order of Police. It gives
the state its first capital punishment
Jaw since July 3, 1978, when a
previous measure was ruled unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme
Court.
Rhodes called on state legislators
to raise the amount of money

available to police and fire pe,..
sloners and to wldllW!I and funilles
of public safety officers killed while
on duty. He aald 15 Ohio peace Officers have been killed In the line Of
duty since 1978.
The bill aUows the death penalty to
be imposed for certain Bggravated
murders, sueh as thnse In which the
governor or a peace Officer, among
others, are slain.
In addition, it WOuld apply in cases
that involve aggravated murders
that occur during commission of a
felony.
Under the new law, a jury which
finds a defendant guilty of a capital
offense would meet to decide which
of three sentences to impose.
It could sentence a defendant to
death, to life imprisorunent with no
parole until after 30 full years in jail,
or to life with no parole until after 20
years behind bars.
The bill will become effective Oct.

Area deaths
Guy F. Gilkey

(Continued from page I I

Also survivej by one son and
daughter-in-law, Albert Westley Fry
and Martha Belle Fry, Denver, Colo.
She is survived by two sisters ,
Katie Gordon, West Jefferson, and
Gladys McClain, Shade; and two
daughter-in-laws Bernice Fry,
Pomeroy and Donna Fry, Rutland.
Fifteen grandchildren and 10
greal-grandchilriren also survive
her
Services will be 2 p.m. Tuesday at
the Rawlings-Coats-Blower Funeral
Home. The Rev . Arland Hughes and
The Rev. Cecil Hughes wiD officiate.
Burial Will be at the Riverview
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home anytune .

Guy F . Gilkey, 79, 39 First St.,
Athens, rued Saturday evening at
O'Bieness Hospita l foll owing a brief
illness.
Mr. Gilkey was bOrn on Gilkey
Ridge in Meigs County the son of the
late Allen and Kalie Howett Gilkey.
He was also preceded in death by
one son. Allen Gilkey and three
brothers .
He
retired from Rose nberg
Salvage Co .. in 1967 following 45
years of service.
He is survived by his wtfe, Blanche Mehl Gtlkey: four sons. Merritt
Of Doylestown : David of Dayton :
Pearl of Donaldsvill e and Gerald of
Colorado Spring s, Colo.: tw o
daughters, Mrs. Walter 1Karen I Mabel Winebrenner
Jones, Athens. and Mrs. Kenneth
Mabel Mae Long Winbrenner, 80,
1Gladys I Baker, Barberton: 13
Middleport, died Sunday morning at
grandchidren and eight great grandReynolds Memorial Hospital in
children : three brothers, Pearl
Glendale, W.Va.
Gilkey, Pomeroy; Harry Gilkey,
She was bOrn Sept. 3, 1900, the
San Di ego, Cahf., and George
daughter of the late William and
Gilkey. Ne w Marshfield; two
Jessie Morris Long .
sisters, Hazel Akers , DenbO. Pa.,
Her husband, Charles Robert Winand Rhoda Lay of Sneed, Fla .
brenner preceded her in death in
Funeral serv1ces will be held
19'12.
Tuesday at I p.m . at the Hughes
She was also preceded in death by
Funeral Home in Athens with the
two sisters and three brothers.
Rev. Edward Morrison officiating.
She is survived by three daughters
Burial wLll be m West Unit Street
and
three son-in-laws : Donna and
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
Charles
King, Moundsville, W.Va.;
funeral home today fro m 2 to 4 and 7
Iris
and
Ray Williams, Pomeroy ;
to9.
and Aldtne and Orner Russell, Grove
City.
She is also surv1ved by three
Ethel Mae Fry
silers. Alberta Wise. Sandusky,
Ethel Mae Fry, 85, Rutland, died Ohio : Grace Burns. Portsmouth,
Saturday at O'Bieness Memorial Va .: and Edie Burrows, Ft. Myers,
Hospital in Athens.
Fla .
She was born Oct. 25, 1895, in
One brother-in-law. Dale WinAthens County . She was the brenner. Crestline, and one sister-indaughter of the late Frank and law, Lelah M. Winbrenner, MidSylvesta Crippen Dayle.
dleport, also survive her.
Her husband, John G. Fry, also
Eight grandchildren and six greatpreceded her m death in 1967.
grandchildren also survive her.
Two sons, John James Fry and
Services will be held noon WedAlva L. Fry. preceded her in death.
nesday at the Rawlings-CoatsShe was also preceded in death by Blower Funeral Home, with the Rev .
Rick Reeder officiating.
SIX sisters and four brothers.
She is survived by two daughters
Burial will be at the Cheshire
and their husbands : Artie and Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call 4 p.m . to 9 p.m.
Gerald Reuter , Pomeroy , and Clara
Tuesday
at the funera l home .
and Faye Hovatter. Hillard , Ohio.

Meigs County happenings •••
Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS SATURDAY-Blanche Gibbs, Pomeroy: Joann Weyersmiller. Pomeroy; Beatric Blake,
Racine .
DISCHARGES---Gl en
Ston e,
Mayme Manning , Ruth Gosney .
ADMISSIONS SUNDAY--- Mary
Harbrecht, Pomeroy : Leah
Williams, Pomeroy; Bessie Turley,
Long Bottom.
DISCHARGE5-Clara Th omas,
Alta Dill, Joann Weyersmiller.

Prohibit dumping
Anyone found dumping trash at
the old Rutland dump will be prosectued warned John Miller, Mayor of
Rutland.

Closed W cdnesday
The title office located in the
Meigs County Court House will be
closed all day Wednesday . July 22, in
order for employes to attend a conferenc-e in Columbus, Larry Spencer, clerk of courts, announced
today .

e

19. But backers say that executions
may not occur in Ohio for months or
even years after that since opponents of capital punislunent have
Vhed to challenge the statute In the
courts on constitutional grounds.
After Rhodes signed the bill Sunday, the American Civil Liberties
Union of Ohio aMounced it was launching a campaign to repeal the
death penalty.
Ohio ACLU Executive Director
Benson A. Wolman said the
organization's board of directors
would meet later this week to map
campaign strategy.
He said the effort would focus on
the courts, the Legislature and
public opinion, and would be in concert with other organizations, including the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored Peuple,
defense attorneys and church
groups.

Suspect
victed and would get the maximum
sentence.
Agea, described by police as a
cool, self-&lt;lisciplined gurunan who
had ties to right-wing groups in his
native Turkey , insists he acted alone
in the May 13 attack in St. Peter's
Square.
Prosecutors say they have no
evidence of a conspiracy. But police
say they are convinced someone
helped Agca, perhaps by financing
his travels around Europe and North
Africa after he escaped ·from a
Turkish jail in 1979.
State prosecutor Nicolo Amato
said he would call abOut 30 witnesses
after Agca finished testifying. Most
of the witnesses were in the square
during the shooting.
The pope, who is still hospitalized,
has not been asked to appear as a
witness or to give a deposition, legal
sources said. He is recovering from
a virus doctors say may have been
contracted from the massive blood
transfusions given him after the
shooting.

i

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ea

Postal

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WASl-UNGTON (API - A federal
mediator said Tuesday there was no
settlement in the Postal Service contract talks despite announcement by
two unions that tentative agreement
had been reached on a new threeyear contract.
" There's no agreement here, I've
still got people in there talking,"
said mediator Nicholas Fidandis
less than two hours after union
leaders said they had headed off a
possible strike by half a million
workers who move the nation's mail.
Fidandis declined to comment on

••

SIGNS DEATH PENALTY LAW- Ohio Gov. · peD811y In Oblo. Tbe slplng lOOk place before a
James A. RHodes signs a bUl relllstallllg lbe deatb oieellllg of !be Ohio Fratel'llll Order of Pollee Ill
Daytoo today. (AP Laserpboto 1-

Two persons were injured in a
Sunday afternoon traffic accident in
Meigs County, accordJng to the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the state highway patrol.
Orville W. Marks, 33, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, and Murl Wood, 83,
Pomeroy, a passenger, were not
treated at the scene for their injuries.
The patrol said Marks reportedly
went left of center while makmg a
tum from Scipio Twp. Rd. 282 onto
Twp. Rd . 5 at 2 p.m. when his car
collided with a vehicle driven by
Mary D. King, 52, Pomeroy.
Moderate damage was reported to
bOth vehicles and Marks was cited
for improper left turn.

the statements by the Postal Services two largest unions and then
asked reporters to leave the downtown Washington hotel suite where
he said negotiations were continuing .
A settlement had been announced
by Moe Biller, president Of the
American Postal Workers Union, in
conjunction with Vincent Sombrotto,
president of the National
Association of Letter Carriers, via a
tape-recorded telephone service for
union members.
Both union heads said they

One hurt, one cited
The Middleport Police Department investigated a car-motorcycle
accident Saturday at 5:09p.m. at the
intersection of Locust and Broadway
Streets it was reported.
Roger D. Williams, Dock St., Middleport was traveling north on
Locust and turned onto Broadway in
front of a motorcycle driven by Fred
Priddy.

First word of the collapse came
from federal mediator Nicholas
Fidandis, who emerged from the
. ~argaining room to tell reporters
waiting for the formal an nouncement of a settlement:

In case uf slrike ...

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•

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NEITHER RAIN NOR SLEET NOR THREAT OF
STRIKE - Postal Service employees at the Los
Angeles Terminal Annex Station continue to work Moo-

day night as tbe Initial deadline lor a strike passes.
Negotiations between tbe Postal Service and its two
largest unions were scheduled to resume Tuesday. I AP
Laserphotol .

Tooiv

mmmiN THE WO lD
SALT LAKE CITY - A judge Monday postponed until Aug. 31 the
first-degree murder trial of avowed racist Joseph Paul Franklin, who
also received his seventh set of court-appointed attorneys ..
At Franklin's request, 3rd District Judge Jay E. Banks relieved Phil
L. Hansen and his son, Steven, as Franklin's attorneys. Hansen had
told the former Mobile, Ala .. resident that his daughter was acquainted with the family of one of two men Franklin is accused of killing .
Franklin, 31, is charged with the sniper slayings of Ted Fields 20,
and David Martin. 18, while they jogged near Sa lt Lake City's Liberty
Park in August.

on

City proud of Miss Universe
GERMANTOWN, Ohio - Even if she isn't Miss Universe, the folks
in this sma ll southwestern Ohio community say they're proud of hometown entrant Kim Seelbreede, who was Miss USA.
Miss Seelbrede, a 2G-year-old blonde who models in the Dayton area.
claimed the Miss USA title in May. Her parents and brother and sister
were in New York City with her during the past week for the Miss
Universe pageant.
"A lot Of people really (here\ thought she would go all the way, "
Mrs. Bender said late Monday night. "But three of us who work at the
Heritage House (variety slorel said if she ~ot into the top 12, we'd
bepleased.
. "I'm speaking for the whole town when I say we're proud of her ."

Sign up at the Farmers Bank.

Can't identify fingerprint
COLUMBUS, Ohio - A criminologist for the Ohio Bureau of
Criminal Identification and Investigation says a fingerprint on a
phony telegram found next to the body of slain millionaire Con.•tantine
"Dean" Milo is too vague to identify.
John H. Olenik, testifying Monday in the retrial of Frederick Milo,
said his department could not identify the faint fingerprint. Prints of
the victim as well as others - including Fred Milo, Dayid E. Harden
and Jolm Harris- were used in identification tests, he said .
Harden, 22, of Dayton, Ky., could not be found before the first trial,
which ended in a hung jury. He testified last week that he was paid
several hundred dollars to kill Constantine Milo.

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CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Monday night in the
Ohio Lottery'$ daily game '·The Number" was 130, The lottery reported earnings of $345,488.50 on its d.aily game "The Nwnber." The earnings came on aales of S8*J,413.50, w'!ile holders of winning tickets are
entitled to share $534,925,lottery officials aaid .
.

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Weather
Considerable cloudiness with a chance of showers or thunderstOITIIIl
today ending this evening. High in the low 111111. Partly cloudy tonight.
!Aw arOund 60. Mostly sunny W,~y. High 75 to 80. Ci)ance of
ra1Ji 50 percent today, 20 percenttuilight and nea~ zero Wednesday, ·
•
Olllo Emwled F'-.t
.
Oblo eslellded foreeul -'l'llllndlly u..qll Saturday. ~tit 1'11111'
•Y IIJid Friday. A. ellllle Ill 1bc wen.....,_, HJcb Ia tile In to mid
.., Liwlla tlielljlperlll uid In . . Tllli fry IMftllltiellll Iaiiie •

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.·'-

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P'rldiyodSalllrdllJ- 1
,..

Some area mail subscribers
to the Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
Pomeroy Sentinel and Point
rteasant Register will still be
'able to receive their newspapers
if there is a postal strike.
Copies of tho newspapers will
be delivered to local stores and
post offices in the region. Subscribers can pick up their paper
by presenting a mailing label
from one of their previous copies .

NO DEAL - American Postal Workers President Moe BUler holds a
copy of a tentative contract which was offered to tbe union signed by U. S.
Postal Service negotiators. BiDer and postal union negotiators announced
tentative agreement early Tuesday morning, but tbe agreement fell
through shortly afterward when union leaders claimed a discrepancy in
tbe written agreement. The unions refused to sign the offered agreement
( AP Laserphoto) .

The executive boards of the two
· 1 : :TI)ere' s no agree ment here . I' ve
still gut people in there~':·.. __, . unions voted unanimously Monday
Postal Service officials were not night to reject out of hand a Postal
immediately available for com- Service wage offer extended just
hours eC:~rlier .
ment.
" This offer adds nothing except to
Despite stnke threats. the Postal
Service reported attendance was further insult 500,000 postal
normal at most post offices for workers ." said Biller.
Sumbrotto added, "We know we
predawn shifts and higher than norare right and we know the employer
mal at some facililies .
The Posta l Service said the public continues to provoke a nationwide
could expect "bl!Siness as usual" at strike."
Postal officials. however, said
the nation 's post offices in the event
of a strike. A contingency plan in- they expected to reach a settlement.
Monda y night's management
cluded suspending the Postal Service monopoly to let private com- proposal would have produced lower
panies deliver letters and calling out cost-of-living raises than had
more than 100,000 military per- previously been offered but would
sonnel, including national guar- have included small annual wage increases, Biller and Sombrato said.
dsmen and reservists, to sort mail.

Renewal levy put onNovember ballot

Judge postpones murder trial

Served with: Whipped
· Poatoes. Chicken Gravy, Cole
Slaw, Hot Roll, Butter and

in motion our telephone network,"
he said.
" Tift, tenns and conditions .. . were
discussed at length" in a caucuS
with top union policy-makers, Sombrotto said .
ll was at that point that " serious
questions about it" arose, he added.
"Then we returnejl to the bargaining
table. When the wage proposal was
presented, we noticed there was a
serious inconsistency with what we
had agreed to" orally.
"We don't v~ew it as a misunderstanding ," Biller said.
The union leaders refused to
elaborate on the discrepancy.
The unions had said the
agreement would continue unlimited
cost-of-living protection and provide
base pay raises of $750 per worker
the first year and $600 in each of the
next two years. It also would
prohibit any employee from being
forced to work more than 10 hours a
day for five consecutive days, the
unions said.

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thought they had a reached
agreement about 2 a.m. EDT on a
tentative three-year contract.
They had announced tbat to the
unions' rank and file on a taped
telephone message and even recommended ratification, but five hours
later Sombrotto said : " We are now
in a position where we don 't have a
contract."
"At approximately 2 a.m. , we
made an agreement. We brought
that, down to our rank and file and
our executive bOdies for their attention and ~pprova l .. . and we put

May was eastbound and tried to
swerve from the oncoming vehicle
when the accident occurred, the
report said.
Troopers said Jacob J. Melvan, 47,
Gallipolis, was not injured in a o~
car crash on Fairfield-Centenary
Road Sunday.
.
The report said Melvan was northbOund at 4:10 a.m. when his
vehicle went off the right llide Of the
road hit an embankment, weri~
acr~ the road and Off the left side;
finally striking a fence owned by
Harry R. Pitchford, Gallipolis.
'
Moderate damage was listed to
Melvan's vehicle and no citation wa~
issued.

The patrol investigated three
minor accidents In Gallia County
over the weekend .
Troopers said two vehicles, one
driven by Larry G. Duke, 40, Patriot
Star Route, and Charlene D. Batey,
36, Rt. I, Northup, reportedly
sideswiped each other on BaggsLincoln Road, one mile south of SR
n5, at 7 p.m. Saturday.
No citations were issued, the
patrol said.
The patrol went to CR 56 at 7:15
p.m. Saturday when 11n auto driven
by Lawrence May, 30, Rt. 2, Bidwell,
collided with an unknown vehicle,
wllich left the scene after the
collision.

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Two hurt in Meigs accident

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1 sect1on , 11 Pages

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. July 21,1981

..

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Copyrighted 1981

AnnOdre, 56, of Buffalo, N.Y., one
Of the two women wounded in the attack, refused to return to Italy to
testify.
There was no word whether the
Priddy was taken to Veterans
other injured woman, Rose Hall, 21,
Memorial Hospital by the Midwould testify. A former resident of
dleport ER Squad.
Shirley, Mass. she is now living in
West Germany .
Williams was cited to court for
The trial is expected to last less
than a week. But if it is not finished failure to yield right of way .
by Aug. I, when the court takes a
month-long summer break, it will be . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - recessed until September.

Nine calls were answered by local
units over the weekend according to
Meigs County Emergency Service.
Saturday at 5:09 p.m. the Middleport unit was called to a carmotorcycle accident near the pool.
They transported Fred Priddy to
Veterans Memorial Hospital: al7 :22
p.m. the Middleport squad was
called to Rutland Street for Carl Still
who was treated at the scene: at 1:57
p.m. Sharon Roseberry, Apple
Grove Road was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Racine
Squad: at 8:21 p.m. the Rutland unit
treated Diana Carman.
Sunday at 7:'1:1 a.m. the Racine
Squad was called to county road 28
for Mary Circle who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center: Racine
again at 4 p.m. for Rex Justice,
Bashan Road, to St. Joseph
Hospital: Rutland at 8:32 a.m. for
Robert Dailey, Happy Hollow Road,
to Holzer Medical Center: Rutland
again at 10:14 a.m. for Ora Carsey,
Pagetown, to Veterans Memorial
Hospital: at 4 p.m. Tuppers Plains to
lndain Run for Arthur Dalton who
was taken to St. Joseph Hospital.

•

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.··

'

'

By KATIE CROW
PomeroY CouncU Is encouraging
payment of delinquent parking
tickets.
Monday night council agreed to
accept $1 payment for delinquent
parking tickets rather than the $2
payment until Aug. I. A parking
ticket is delinquent after 24 hours.
After the deadline. persons failing
to pay delinquent tickets cou ld be
charged up to $25 plus costs.
The action is to increase revenue
and to clear the books of all
delinquent parking tickets.
Council, in other business, agreed
to place on the November ballot a
renewal one mill levy for a five year
period, proceeds of which will be
used for street lighting.
Council also agreed to draw up an
ordinance to increase the fine on
charges of an open flask from $50 to
$100.
At the suggestion of counciiman
Harold Brown, council will direct a
letter to the Ohio Department of
Transportation, Division 10, Marietta, requesting an additional light on
Nye Ave .. allowing a right turn on

red.

...

It was reported thai the road un-

der the bridge has been repaired for
traffic, also four culverts have been
placed in the area .
Council also agreed to place two
high sodium lights at the former
sedior high school that is bemg
remodeled for a city building.
Counci l at the recommendation of
acting police chief, George Stitt,
hired Don Snyder as a part time
police officer.

..

Meeting with council was Charles
Legar, fire chief, who asked council
pay for painting of the inside and
outside of the fire station at a tota l
cost of $700. CouncLI agreed .
CouncLI also agreed to change the
heating system in the fire bay from
electric to gas with three overhead
heaters. Council asked that Legar
submit specifications in order that
the job may .be advertised .
Bill Snouffer asked councLI to Improve 35 feel of Ross Street that joms
Wehe Terrace to which council concurred.
Jake Koebel of Columbia Gas in-

fonned council the local gas company office located in Middleport
will close Aug. 6. The office will be
moved to Ganipolis.
Residents will still be offered the
same service as in the past Koebel
said. Residents may still pay their
bills at Swisher and Lohse in
Pomeroy, Dutton Drugs in Middleport, and Ridenours at Chester.
PROGRESS NOTED
Kim Shields, grant consultant. informed council that work on the htgh
school is progressing very well and
the FmHA is evaluating the fmal
drawings on the high school
bui lding.
Shields said no problems exist at
the present time and things seem to
be working smoothly.
Shields did suggest that council
continue input mto programs for
possible future grants through HUD .
However, he could not guarantee
future grants through HUD as it
depends on what action is taken by
the state.
Shields introduced Chuck Mann of
Engineering Associates who informed council of the various projec ~

it had been involved in and what it
could offer the village in the event
council would like to change Jrom
the present engineering finn of
Burgess and Niple .
..
A report showed that durinj,(tlie'
month of June 1,0911 parking tickets
were issued and $2,690 collected
frumthe parking meters .
L'

Steve Hartenbach. meterman, infun ned council that for the first two
weeks in July 635 parking tickets
were issued and $696 collected from
Ihe meters.
The Mayor's report for the month
of June in the amount of $2,017 was
accepted.
Larry Wehrung, councilman is a
patient at St. Jospeh Hospital,
Parkersburg. following a head injury he sustained in a fall at his
home it was reported.
The meeting was opened by
prayer by Mayor Andrews. Attending were Mayor Andrews, Jane
Walton , clerk, Betty Baronick, John
Anderson, Harold Brown. Bruce
Reed and Bill Young, council members, Chief Stitt and Donnie Ward .

Southern board okays deficit budget
Southern's Local Board of
Education Monday nig~t approved a
deficit budget for 1982.
The budget, which shows anticipated receipts and expenditures,
1s submitted to the county auditor
for approval. At the end of 1981 the
district will show a deficit of $83,659
and at the end of 1982. a deficit of
$267,712. However, included in the
budget expenditures are expenses
such as roof repairs and purchase of
buses.
If money is not available, the
necessary repair will not be done.
However, it is necessary to list all
anticipated expenses even though
they may not materialize and which
automatically increases the ex-

penses to the point where the budget
does show a deficit.
The board, in other business, accepted the resignation of William
Hensler as teacher and head football
coach. ·
The board, following a lengthy
discussion, decided to elimmate
Hensler's position entirely on the
basis that other teachers could take
over Hensler's teaching load. Hensler earlier had been named head
coach replacing Howard Caldwell
and Mick Winebrenner who shared
the post last fall .
As for the head football coaching
position, it being eliminated.
The board agreed to place the football program under the jurisdiction

Police check two accidents
Pomeroy police investigated two
accidents, including . a hit-skip.
recently.
Leland Kirby, New Haven, W.Va.,
told police a truck hit his car
sometime yesterday, but did not
stop.
Pollee later found the truck and
impounded it, but the drlv~ has not
yet lleen i~entified.
;tctrby's car suataihed damages of
\Wer$150.
. ·
.,A lifO vehicle wreck on Route 733
at lleacon StaUon Saturday morning
· left one car with moderate damages.

Ridllrd Coleman, uttle Bcittom,

...-..waltlnll 'at • stop sign
I

to

..

tum

left, when a !ruck driven by Robert
L. Wood, Racine, hit the rear of his.
car.
Coleman's car received over $150,
while Wood's truck was undamaged.
A theft of gasoline was reported at
Sugar Run Mill Monday night.
Polce say sometime during the
night someone cut a gas line on a
truck parked at the mill, and
•
drained the gasoline.
According to police reports, a
bicycle was stolen from the Derenberger residence in Pomecoy
sometime Monday night.
Pollee are investigating the incident.

of Frank W. Porter, a Pomeroy Attorney and Darrell Dugan
In other action, the board named
Ruth Stearns as head teacher at
Syracuse Elementary for the 1981-82
school year.
The bOard also employed Barbara
Beegle as a teacher for the 1981-82
school year and Linda Grindley wa s
hired as a cook at Letart Elementary for three hours per day.
The bOard accepted bids for dairy
products, bre11d, gas, nil, and equipment. Persons wishing to review the

1J1d~ C:tre invited to do so by corr
ta l' tin~ Nancy Carnahan, treasurer.

The board approved an int·apacitation pulLey for the superintendent and the treasurer.
Attending were Sue Grueser.
president. Don Sm 1th, vice
prestdent, Denny Evans, Shirley
Johnson and Charl es Pyles, board
members . Bobby Ord, s uperintendent, and Mrs . Carnahan. The
board will mc.ct a gain in regular
session un Aug. 10., at 7: 30p.m.

Marietta woman
dies in wreck
An 18-year-old Marietta woman
died as a result of injuMes suffered
in a ·one-car acci(Jent in Rio Grande
Monday night.
Julie M. Price was pronounced
dead of head injuries at Holzer
Medical Center at 12 :17 a.m. today.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the state
highway patrol said Prjce was
driving west at 10:30 p.m. on Lake
Drive in the village, two-tenths of a
· mile north of SR 325, when she apparently lost control of her vehicle.
· The car then went off the left side
of the road and into a ditch, overturning.
,
Two passengers were in the car
when the accident occurred.

Terri J . Wilson. 19. Pomeroy , was
apparently not treated for injuries
suffered in the accident, and Dawn
Church, 18, Cheshtre, was taken to
HMC by the Gallia EMS, where she
was treated and released for
bruises.
Wilson and Church ·are registered
as students at Rio Grande College. 11
was not known if Price was
registered as a student yet at the
college.
EMS personnel were reportedly at
the scene for over an hour trying to
extract Price from the car's
wreckage.
Funeral arrangements had not yet
been announced this morning.

�.
Commentar

Tuesday, July 2),1981

way

the

On May 31, this colWIID published
excerpts from an interview said to
have been conducted by an
Uruguayan journalist, Gustavo
Ruegger, with Simon Wiesenthel,
the legendary Nazi hunter. The
relevant passage from the interview
published in E l Pais on April 26 was,
" I also know that many of these
people 1Argen tine Jewish Peronist
sympatluzersl went to jail accused
of being in favor of terrorism, with
nothing to do with whether or not
they might have been Jews. One of
them is 1Jacobol Timenna n, and
the peopl&lt; who wanted to help him
converted the case into an antiSemitic persecution. I can un·
derstand this, that since Tunerman
is a leftis t, he is against an y government, any movement, that might be
rightist, but tn a fight. you have to
stick to the truth."
On June 14, The !'iew York Times
published a story by Colin Campbell
the lead sentence of whi&lt;:h was,
"Simon Wtsenthal. the hunter of
Nazi war criminals. satd yesterday
that quotations attributed to him in
the recent syndicated column by

world

William F . Buckley Jr . questioning
the integrity of Jacobo Timennan ...
had been partly fabricated ___ He
said he had not discussed any connection between Mr. Timerman a nd
terrorists and that he had not spoken
about Argentine politics because he
knew nothing about such matters ."
Wisenthal went on to complain that
he had not granted an " interview" to
Ruegger , that he had simply talked
with him.
On June 22, a story in the
Washington Post alluded to the controversy as follows: " Buckley
received information 1which has since been discredited I ... "
On June 23, Jack Newfield writing
m the Vtllage Voice on the controversy said, "But it now turns out
the quotes used by Buckley were a
hoax . WIESENTHAL NEVER SAID
SUCH TIUNGS. 1Italics in the
ortgmal. 1. Buckley was so anxious to
get them into prmt that he never attempted to verily the ir authenticity .
1The quotes were) fabricated."
On June 1~. I called Ruegger and
told him The New York Times had
reported Wiesenthal's disavowal.

The Dai Iy Sentinel
111 Coul1 Stn't't

Negotiators ·said far apart

Page-2-TheDailySentillel
Pomeroy- MiddlepOrt, Ohio
1

11~911-USI

DJ:\'nTED m 11ft iNTDlF.STQYTIIE

ME~M.ASON

AREA

PnlistK·r

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD
DALE ROTHGEB , JR.

,\ \1 f: M8F.H of Tht&gt; Ass. ....... ia ll'd Prf'!&gt;ll. l11la nd Dull''
.\nwru·an Nt&gt; v. spa jH•r .. ublishf'n; A~~~)(· tatlon
'

Pr!'l~

.4ssodati(ID aM lhf

Lf.Tif. K.&gt;; OF OPI\'10!'10 arT • t lromt"d . Tht-~ shnuld Dt- I r-s~ than 3M lli}Tds loag. All
k1k r:. art' ~ub rt' r l to tditin~: a nd mu st bt- sl,::n«i •ith namt', addrru a DCI trlrphflllt' num·
hN 'n uru;i~ut'd lrlkr.. •ill b.- pobl~ht'd . I A' Itt-~ s huuld br lu ~~"ld lal&gt;le . a&amp;.lrt'SlliRl
• s~ ut·~. nn1 fN'I"!innalitlt&gt;s .

NEW YORK ' API - Stx months
&lt;nto office. Ronald Reagan's job
rating on handling the nat&gt;on·s
ecunurny hi:ts slipped . a long wi th
Amer ica ns ' conftdence that any
prestdent can halt the infla tiOnary
sp~ral, an Assoctated Press-NBC
:-lews poll says .
But the publ&lt;c's s upport for
Reaga n's plan to slash federal inrume taxe~ over the next three years
re rna1ns st ro ng. even though 1t has
declined a bit. too
The AP-NBC poll, based on
telephone mterviews with 1,599
ad ults across the country July 13-14.
also said the public is concerned that
Reagan has not spe lled ou t hi s
foreign policies, which have taken a
back seal to the economy '" the
open 1ng months of the admtnistra uon .
Amencans ha ve lowered the&lt;r
opini on of Reagan s efforts to solve

...,.--------~Wi-."'_'ia_ln_t_
-. il_.u_ck_
-,ey_
-)_.:...
r.

supererogatory, but it is strange
waschen' - I s hall wash his head Ruegger said he stuck by his story,
that The New York Times and the
which means: rebuke him, chide
but declined to be questioned over
Washinf4on Post should ~pliciUy
him. Wiesenthal also said that
the telephone .
consider than an llltervaew IS
Timerman was .not arrel!ted lor
In late June, I telephone to Colin
"discredited" merely because the
being a Jew, but for being a leftist,
Campbell of The New York Times
interviews subsequently wishes he
just as you wrote."
a nd asked whether any reporter for
hadn' t said what the did say.
Demonstrations by Jack Newfield
The New York Times had gone to
when the tapes were
Especially
that he is a horse's ass are
Ruegger to listen to the tapes. ll!r .
Campbell said this had not been
done, agreed it s hould be done, and
said he could take measures to see
that this be done .
Yesterday, I received a letter
from a diplomat in Montevideo with
whom I have had extensive dealings
over many years. He writes : " I
know Mr. Ruegger quite well - in
fact tt was I who got him the invitation to visit Austria land interview Wiesenthal) . Having read
your column, I telephoned Ruegger ,
told him about his name being men- c~u·o•M'$ IJjrf\J A !:A~ t"r'OIJI" ~ f"N..Wi"", .. '
tioned by you and asked him if I ~1\1"1
nlln "',.~, ~~,;; IV ~
could hear the taped intervtew . He
came immediately, brought the
Ulpe, and I listened to it very
ca refull y. I can tell you that every
word lS correct. and can be
corrobora ted by the tape any time .
ft is hard to understand how Wiesen! hal could say that he was
misquoted. In the interview he puts
qutte a distance between himself
a nd Ttmerman. He said, for instance, that on his next visit to Israel
he would see Timennan and give
him a good scolding. I believe you,...
WIT\-\ P.A()(HANl;),(l()SS;·a:)URT TO
understand German 1I don't) - he VV
said: " .. ich werde ihm den Koph
~

A

l!QCO .. .'

WASHINGTON (AP) The
mouthpieces have been gagged in
the baseball talks - once they leave
the negotiating table. Whether that
means stadiwns wiU soon ring with
the cry of" Play baU! " remains to be

there, the whole time. It isn't easy
for columnists to send reporters to
Montevideo to listen to tapes.
But the Times and the Post bave
extensive resources, and they can
always ask the Associated Press in
Montevideo to take an hOur off and
listen to the tapes.

suggestion of Labor Secretary
Raymond Donovan.
Donovan was due back at today's
talks after spending some lour hours
with the )wo sides Moll&lt;lay, the first
session ·in WBllhington after more
than two months in New York.
"We've had face-1&lt;&gt;-lace talks all
afternoon . there's a
press
blackout," said Kenneth Moffett, acting head of the Federal Mediation
and Conciliation Service and the

seen.
The two sides in the 46-day-old
strike were to "'-IJlllO negotiations
free-agent comover the ~ue
JM;nsation at 9:30 a.m. EDT tpday,
With a news blackout imposed at the

or

eC()DOmy
the natton s econonuc problems
desptte a declmmg mflatton rate and
progress in getti ng his progra m
throug h C?ngress.
F ort y-flv e percen t of those
questtoned ga ve Reagan a good or
excell ent ratmg on the ecOIIomy,
wtth 34 pe~~ent ma rkmg hts efforts
·only fatr. Ftfteen percent said hlS
work had been poor and 6 percent
were not sure.
In the May AP·NBC poll , 50 percent rated Reagan's economtc efforts good or excellent, 30 percent
sa id only fa ir a nd 13 percen t sa id
poor.
Eve n as the public 's rating of
Reagan economic work has slipped,
Ameri cans are less and less confident tha t any prestdent could do
something effecttve about mflallon .
Onl y 33 percent of those intervt ewed Sa id that "an effective
president would be able to control in-

What others say ...
By The Associated Press

THE SPRINGF'fELD SUN - " Attorney General William J Brown·, unannounced candidacy for the Democrati c gubernatorial nomination got a boost
from the Ohio Supreme Court.
" The court ruled last week that the Legislature went too far in the law
luruting the attorney gene ral's control over charitable bingo licensing.
"Under the law, a bingo operator found gui llty of any mfraction, nll matter
how slight. faced permanent loss of license. Under the court's interpretation ,
an operator who loses his hcense may apply for reinstatement the following
year .
"This will gtve Brown a great deal more to say about which church.
veterans a nd fraternal groups are permitted to run charity bingo games . It
will also mcrease the likelihood that a group that gets its license back as a
result of a favorable ruling from the attorney general will remember the kindness when election time rolll! orotmd.
" This is not the sort of discn!lionary authority that ought to rest with the
holder of an elective office. Thf·tempeation towlltd lenient dealing may be
too great to resist, even (OU111118- whuaeaim is to uphold the law ."

" "OrdillaMiy, Ohio Olmottatll would be licking
THE TOLEDO BLADE 4

thetr chops in preparatica!nr drawlnc «nother JIU1.i.lall redistrlctilll map
for the Ohio General .Usnnbly Ileal$ they ha"'!! a ).2 marpn in the state
Apportionment Board wllidreonlrals state le8lslallve c1istrirt lilies.
"However. a campaign conducted by lhe Fair and Impartial Re&lt;ijstricttng
1FAIR I Conunittee expedt to radllts goal of 400,IIJO piiCitioosignatlll'ls to
put a constitutional IUildilla!Mt on the Novelllbet baUat. Thb would
eliminate the present system and would require that aU distids be drawn
with the aid of com~n as compactly as pcllliible and without consideration for partisan adVIBiage. llweuld rep~ I Jll'actice almost as old
'.
as the republic it..elt, called ~rwlll'inl ·
"Congressional redistrit'llllti.ia a&amp;ded ~ ,IDIIirectlY ~U!t! the
Legislature controls that~~ eQI'obG&amp; tf ~---IS~ The
twopartiesareexpectedtot'ti. . . . . Oilthat~
··What worries Deancllnll ia tJii·.,.-biUty ... the·JieilubiiClllll may
spend as much as a rniiiiGII dollan trylllc to sell lilt amendment to the voters
next November.
"The GOP is aided by Ill .mtlatton with the U.,U. of Women Voten on
the issue a fact which i.IIIIIIIO)'i"' till the Demoeni11. Hft'ever, the league
has .Jong 'supported the !del ol nCJnilill'tiMII redilllictlnl- The GOP aimply
joined them because their alternative is to Jive with anjllller Democrat
redistricting plan lor the next decade.
"If the FAIR group manages to get Its constitutional amendment on the
ballot It should have a good strategic position. It will cut no ice with voters
for t~ Democrats to complain that the Republican~ would be just as unfair
to them if they controlled the State Apportiorunent Board. Ohio Democrats
could wind up painting themselves into a comer on this !&amp;sue.' '
.

stage or close to setUement. Moffett
declined to characterize the
blackout imposed Monday Ural way,
but reiterated that he felt the intensive media coverage of the talks
while In New York had hindered

mediator lor almost two year's in
baseball's war over free-agent compensation.
Moffett refused to discuss what
went' on at the session in the federal
agency's downtown headquarters,
but tater told the Associated Press
that negotiators " had never been
further apart. "
Generally, news blackouts are
viewed as protection lor
negotiations reaching a critical

progress.
''The main reason lor the blackout
is the same reason we came to
Washington," he said. "The two
sides should be allowed to talk back
and forth without having to come
down here (to the press room) like
it's a tennis match ."
Members of the two negotiating
teams declined comment as they left
the building.
.
" Hope you guys have a nice
evening ," Raymond Grebey, direc·
tor of the owners' Player Relations
Committee, said to reporters as he
departed.
Marvin Miller, the usually
talkative executive director of the
Major League Players Association ,
would only smile and nod as reporters approached him.
Donovan also declined comment.
Donovan met with each side
separately for about 45 minutes
Monday, then attended a joint
negotiating session which ended just
before 6 p.m. EDT, as the two sides
broke for caucuses, according to
D.J. Yount, a spokeswoman for Moffett.
The toll . of the strike grew as
negotiations reswned. Since it began
June 12, 476 games including 14
today have been wiped out.

,
f

.

BASEBALL TALKS ~ Ray Grehey, lei~
bargaining agent lor team owners, left, and Marvin
Miller, rtgbt, oegotlator lor the players, arrive Monday

''WACO Wml

at the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service In
Washington. A news blackout was Imposed Monday af·
.ter lalks resumed fn Was!llngton. ( AP Laserpboto ~.

NO GAMES, NO NEWS - Federal Mediator Kenneth E. Moffett,
right, announces a news blackout on talks belween players' representatives and team owners at the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service in Washington Monday. Talks to try to salvage the basebaU season
resumed in Washington Monday. ( AP Laserphoto) .

'ffit

Bartrum • takes

Efficiency, effectiveness, major ccrnc~~ns .

ROBERT L. WINGETI'

Reagan's

w o r k a __ _ _

'PONt'

PomrroJ. Obi(l

Middleport, Ohio

'

~--------------------------------------------------------------------~T~ue:s:d!a~y~~J~u~IV~21:·~1958~1~~--

The

Pomeroy

NEW YORK API - As the
economv becomes more involved in
the prOduction of services, C.
Jackson Grayson is concerned that
we make a clear distinction between
effice ncy a nd effectiveness .
--Effi ciencv mea sures if you a re
do mg thing; right. Effectiveness
concerns itself wtth whether you are
doing the right thtng ," says
Grayson,
cha irm a n of The
American Productivity Center,
Houston.
He contends that both must be

measured if a worthwhile productlvity picture is to be obtalned. And
he suggests that America's lagging
productivity growth is in part a consequence of poor effectiveness.
Should we measure hospital
productivity solely by such factors
as the number of patients treated?
Or i.s a more producltve facthty one
that teaches people how to remain
healthy, and thus treats fewer
patients''
In this age of electronic compulers, shouldn't productivity be

de~r~~~d~~~port
h~
'?-

rating

flalion .. Ftfty-none percent satd
fla tton IS beyond any prestdent s
control." Eight percent were not
sure
In the January AP.-NBC poll , 48
percent sa id a president could do
something about inflation and ¥1
percent disagreed .
Americans' overall ratmg or
Reagan's performance is also down
from May .
Fifty-five percent rated Reagan's
work overall good or excellent, compared with 62 percent in May . Thirty-one percent said his work has
been only fair and 11 percent gave
him poor marks. Three percent were
not sure.
Fifty-eight percent of those who
had hea rd of Reagan economic

I

th
n

current plan for a three-yea r , 25 percen t cut in income tax rates.
Nineteen percent were opposed and
23 percenl were not sure .
That's a slight drop from the May
poll, when 64 percent backed the
Reagan plan and 22 percent were opposed.
Foreign policy is developing into a
weak spot for Reagan in public
opinion.
Fifty-one percent of those
questioned agreed that Reagan "has
failed to make clear just what his
foreign policies are." Thuty-two
percent disagreed and 17 percent
were not sure.
Reagan's marks are similar to former President Carter's._ rating
durmg his first year in office.

t
e

.

s

eps

WASHINGTON - More than a
quarter of a century has passed since a blue-ribbon commission,
headed by former president Herbert
Hoover , brought tn its recommendations for reorganization of the
federal government. It's time to put
a nother such corrunission on the job.
Republican Senator Bill Roth of
Delaware
and
Democratic
Congressman Richard Bolling of
Missouri are working on the idea.
They have sponsored companion
bills in the Senate and House calling
for a biparttsan !&amp;-member commission to undertake a tw&lt;&gt;-year
st~dy of our fede ral government as
it operates today. If history repeats,
the study should swiftly recover the
anticipated $16 million investment.
The Hoover Conunission that was
named by President Truman in 1947
brought in its detailed report two
years later. The commisston found
upward of 1,800 departments ,
bureaus, commissions, agencies,
councils and corrunittees employing
2.1 million federal workers. No
!ewer than 65 agencies were repor·
ting directly to the president. Likera
coo ling field of lava, this
bureaucratic eruption had stifled innovation , inefficiency and

0f M

r.

federalism all at the same time.
It is one of the elementary truisms
of government at every level that
the reports of study conunissioners
are to be seen, not read, and cer·
tainly not to be acted upon. Such
reports emerge from a strong sense
of procrastination that characterizes every legislative body. It is
almost always better to put off until
tomorrow what is too much trouble
to do today. Appoint a study commission 1 And forget it.
The
Hoover
Commission's
superlative studies provided an exception to the rule. Prodded by Mr.
Truman, Congress underfook a
dramatic restructuring of the
federal gove=t. Dozens of agencies were el' · ted or combined.
The State De rtment was wholly
reorganized. Under the Military
Unification Act, some impressive
savings were achieved. President
Eisenhower in 1953 inherited a
reasonably taut ship.
But governments are like attics,
back closets and rolltop desks. Left
untended, they attract a prodlgiOils
clutter. So it is IJ&gt;day. Just a month
ago Saul Pelt, one of tbe top repQr·
ters of the Associaied Press, took a
perceptive lOOk at what has become

measured not JUSt on the hnes ri
data produced but on the basis of
whether that data is read and
utilized or just left to gather dust '
He draws still another example
from the manufacturing sector .
American automakers, he observes,
ran their assembly lines as effictently as they could. But , he contends, "they didn't produce the right
cars. The Japanese did. The
Japanese were both efficient and effective ."
Productivity, says Grayson , is
made up of many things, and "to
work on one aspect could be a
mistake . There is no one answer.
And we should not expect irnprovements to come quickly and
easily ."
But he does have many
suggestions about areas he feels are
poorly understood. In service
busmesses as well as in manufacturing, people should count. Productivity can be improved, he feels, by
paying greater attention to worker's
job security, goals and need for involvement.
" Involvement means asking employees, listening to them ,
recognizing their contributions perhaps with money - sharing information, letting them know about
the future, letting them own a share
in the business ."
Hoo

v

Grayson s own a ~hare was
meant mamly m ligurattve sense, he
said, but he recognizes that a cornmon managem~nt reflex lS the
leehng that rnvovement wtth
workers ultimately means loss of
control.
.
.
" I don't t~.nk ma~ge~ent wt~l
lose control, he satd. I don I
bellcve employees wan~. to control.
They wanttocontrtbute.
Grayson, fonner dean of business
schools at Tulane and SOuthern
Methodist universities, left his post
as Prest'den t N'IXOn •s p rt'ce com•mssioner convinced that inflation
had roots beyond his reach _ that it
was based in a productivity
slowdown. How, he wondered, could

•

prlces be controlled when it was
costing more to produce goods?
He was appalled to lind that
productivity data was unreliable.
The government's measure included
labor's contributions, in the lonn of
output per manhour, but failed (and
still does) to measure the impact of
capital invested. (The Productivity
Center now has its own index. )
Raising $10 million in live years,
he founded the business-supported
center to educate the public ,
produce more reliable measurements of output, and teach management
and labor how to implement
techniques known to increase ef·
ficiency and effectiveness.

James]. Kilpatrick
JL---- - - - - - - - - - - proper limits? What are the
separate functions? How can these
awesome powers best be exercised
- and best be restrained?
Forty years of political reporting
have left this observer deeply sk~
tical about study commissions and
study reports. Such labors depend
for their rare success upon a
dedicated membership and an
obedient staff. Leadership is
everything. The word is going
around that former president Gerald
Ford might be tapped to take per·
sonal charge of the proposed in· .
vestigation. A more experienced
choice could not be found.

Bengals

open

" One thing I don 't want to see happen is to have a World Series, or
playoffs, called a sham," Sullivan
said Monday. "I'd rather not have a
season than see that happen.

camp

"II we start heading into September I with the strike I, you know
how I'd vote on picking up the
season.

.

.

•

•

·training

Under the best circwnstances, the .
Roth-Bolling corrunission hardly
could usemble a staff and get to
work liefore spring of next year.
Given two and a haU years to complete and publish its report, the commission would be reporting to
Congress in 1985. If Mr. Ford would
accept the chalrmanshiJI, and agree
to give the task his wadividect at·
tention, the study could become the
crowplng achievement of a life in
public service. This was true of Mr.
Hoover. It could be true of Mr. Ford ·
asweU.
-

NOaA IT
\

ROLE PLA VING- Sao Diego Charger quarterback Dan Fouts (left)
tries his sklfls at halfback as he takes a haodoff from backup quarterback
James Harris at the team's training camp Monday at the University of
Ca1Hornia-8an Diego campus. ( AP Laserphoto I.

BOSTON IAPI Haywood
Sullivan, c&lt;&gt;-Owner and .general
manager of the Boston Red Sox,
says that if the 41klay-old baseball
strike heads into September he
favors wiping out the remainder of
the 1981 major league season.

•

· ltOMI.. I HAP
~so

CINCINNATI !AP I Th e
glamour of the regular season -was
absent as the Cincinnati Bengals
opened training camp Monday with
grueling workouts for rookies.
Training camp· is the part of the
season most ·people know little
about. For $350 a week, players
exercise. driU, eat and sleep. Quarterback Kenny Anderson said the
pay is looked forward to even by
veterans, who haven't -been paid by
the team since December.
During the training, players do
exercises such as the grass drill or
up-downs. Players 1'\lD in place, drop
to their stomachs, jump up and do it
again about 40 times. Quickly.
Veterans, who don't have to par·
tlciPate In daily workouts unW Thur·
sday, watched as the rookies did the
grass drill at Spinney Field Moqday.
Defensive Uneman Gary Burley
said ~ exercise is, one
of 1&lt;·lhe,.1 wors\•
~
parll of camp.
··
'·
"It hurts your upper body and
Yill!l" ilrms. And landing 'pn' yo~
stomac:h knocks the;wi!id out of you.
But aft,er three dayi 'it kirid ol gets
lllle old hatit Burley said.
Quar1erbacks ~ anp' Jack"
'l'llolni*Jit also rated the drills a~ the

'I

•

..

'

"

hitter,

Dwayne Hively plated the lone
Gallipolis run.
Although he walked six batters,

.~

•''

Asked if "other forces" m ight be
trying to get control of major league
baseball, Sullivan replied, "You said
it, I didn't."
Then, he added :
" Can you imagine what it would
be like trying to get an agreement
with 150 agents rather than one

· COLUMBUS, Ohio !API - Jo Jo
Widower, driven by Terry Van
Rhoden, won the eighth featured
race by '• of a length in 2.01.1 at
Scioto Downs on Monday night.

th in Wednesday's championship
game, while the losers will meet in
the Consolation game.

Rodd Harrison turned in a great pit- .---;::=========~­
ching performance for the Pomeroy 1
Pirates . Harrison held the hardStarting this friday
hitting Padres to just one hit a nd one
run, while striking out mnc .
Ju~ 24th
Harrison pi cked up the wm a nd
DRAGONSLAYER &amp;
Dwayne Hively suffered the loss,
although he ga ve up just two hits to
ENDLESS LOVE
the usually tough Pirate crew. He
fanned fiv e and walked f1ve. Huey
Eason and Gerald Moore each
singled for Pomeroy , while Steve
Tarbell singled fo r the lone Padre
hit.
Tonight Sy racuse meets Albany's
53 1 JACKSON Pltt:E ·RI . JS WEST
Fanners in the first game and
Phone 446 · 4524
Rutland takes on Pomeroy's P irates
BARGAtN MATINEES ON SAr 5 SUIW
All SEATS JUST Sf 50
in the..second ga me of the semi-final
A OMISSION EVEFIY TUESDAYS I.SO
round . Both winners will earn a ber·

[.lu'Lv '17 ih't:"23J
w.ttou..,.~- ..,fl

all this to blow over and heal the
wounds." He said there also will
have to be " one helluva public
relations program to bring things
back to where they were ."
But, he added. "the ~ ame is going
lo outlive us all" beca use it is " too
sim ple yet tuo complex to let anyone
control it."
If the strike is settled. Sullivan
said, he would like an extension of
the basic agreement, due to ex pire
after the 1983 season, to "g ive us
more time to try and repair damage
of what already has happened."
As for a settl ement, he added, " I
would ha te to see either side cave in .
That would just leave everything
still hanging ."

ffilx··
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G

...,

?•1d Wl (K " 7 :00 &amp; 9 10 I'M .
&lt;;AT6 '&gt;:.J N M.AT!N[f S 1: 00 &amp; 1·15

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l."[lf" 7: 10 &amp; g: )O P. M.
I. ~U i~ MATJN[['!.I .I O &amp; l : JO

~ th

l) p\f

association?''

As for the prolonged strike,
Sullivan said "it will take a while for

Dr. P. James Navalkowsky

Specializing In Internal Medicine
Is Now Accepting Patiertts ..

Ir;~~~~~~~;,;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i

Summer Clearance

Office Hours
Will Be

Starting Wed., July 12nd

9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Monday · Friday
Dr. Navalkowsky

DILES
Hearing Aid .C enter

Cal.l 675-6143

444 W. Union St: - Athens, Oh.

FOR APPOINTMENTS.

t'ur H•·iliin11 Aid
•·;.( .. ;s.•h•r!ion. S.·r~i ri·: tlr.c:un•uhalion,
~- , Ha.~...t On~\ ··~r• t.~ll''.r,lt·n"•'-

Al!d!Or 81'fl'rral tu ArtJ•roJiriat••
. ' . MPdi~"~l s,..... lall••••

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7-0

and order.''

Sdoto Down!l rt'SUit!l

1

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the lack of a players' union would
create chaos 'in major league
baseball.
Sullivan, breaking a self-imposed
silence on the strike after an
amateur all-star game at Fenway
Park, strongly denied that club
' owners want to break the Players'
Association.
" I honestly can say that I have not
heard one of the 26 owners say they
have to get rid of or break the
union," he told an impromptu news
conference. In my opinion, that's the
last thing we would want to see happen.
·' It would cause chaos. I would
rather have the association to deal
with because it helps to keep rules

"Starting with a month to go
would be like selling five pounds of
potatoes when you advertise 10 on
the bag ."
Despite the strike. Sullivan said

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double and single for Rutland, while
Shoemaker singled and doubled, and
Hart, Dailey each added singles.
In the second contest, Pomeroy's
Pirates continued their outstanding
season by posting a 3-1 win over the
Gallipolis Padres . Pomeroy scored
all the runs it needed in the first inning , then ' held off the talented
Padres for the win .
In the first Phil King reached
home on an error, Brian Freeman
drew a walk, and Gerald Moore
delivered a two-run single to give
.Pomeroy the initial lead. Moore
later scored on a hard hit ball by
Greg Fields that resulted in an
error.
The only Gallipolis score came in
the fourth frame as a run was forced
home on four straight walks.

no

Sox boss favors ending season

er

of the house of our fathers. Once it
was a simple structure, uncrowded,
comfortable to live in. But now?
"What we have," said Pelt, " is a
big, implausible, ramshackle house,
distorted by random additions, by
corridors that go nowhere and
ropms that don't connect, a house
loosely expanded through the years
for numberles children, most of
them unexpected."
Back in 1800, when the nation's
population was about 5.3 million,
"big goverrunent" was not much of
a problem. Since then, while our
population has multiplied by 42
times, government employment has
grown by 500 times. Today more
than 18 million persons are employed in government. They
represent one of every six employees in the t.UllabOr force, and
they cost us ~2 bilion In llalaries
alone. The Federal Reglater of 1941
carried 7,952 pages of rules alld
regulations. The Regialer of 1979
carries 77,498 pages.
Roth and Bolllng envi.Mun for their
new collllllillslon a brOider task than
the old Hoover Commission tOOk on .
It is high time that we took a long,
slow look at the complex pictQre of
government t.Uily. What are'. the

SYRACUSE - Two Meigs County
teams, the Rutland Reds and
Pomeroy Pirates, advanced to the
semi-final round of the Syracuse Little League Tournament last night
behind two outstanding pitching performances .
The Rutland Reds blanked the
Mason Rangers 7~ in the opener
behind a n&lt;&gt;-hit shut out by young
fireballer Michael Bartrum. Then&lt;&gt;hitter was Bartrum's second of the
tournament . He fanned 15 and came
c lose to pitching a perfect game by
allowing just one walk. Billy Mar·
shall suffered the defeat for Mason
with six strikeouts and three walks.
Rutland scored three runs in the
third inning , then added some insurance in the sixth frame with
another four run rally. Oiler had a

second

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·.'Phone ~6I4l ' 594-:t171
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Dr. Navalkowsky's Office Is
Located At
2513 Jackson Ave.

.,

In The Professional Building

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11·,. ~-,. 1\ir~«o. Gallla aiid 1\laoun Cclunll,.•
.
On A R"''lul 11r Ba•J•
; .

Point Pleasant,_W. Va.

�..'
Pomeroy - M

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--~igs

Ohio

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For Andy
Bushak, playing football is like
riding a bicyle - )'OU may get rusty,
but you don't forget how to do it.
But trying to make it in the big
leagues won't be easy for Bu.shak,
who, at '!7, is the Cleveland Browns' ·
oldest rookie. He began working out
with the team on SwiCiay in the
opening drills of swruner training.
It was his first time in a football
uniform since the Coacbes All·
American Game in 1976.
"I had a long lime to think about
this, to prepare for it, so I'm ready,"
the inside linebacker said. "I think I
did OK for the first day."
Bu.shak delayed his pro football
career five years by serving in the
Navy. After starring at Valley Forge
High School in Partna, where he won
All-Ohio honors in 1971, Bushak tur·
ned down scholarship offers frbm
three colleges. He chose the Naval
Academy, which required a fiveyear commitment as an officer after
his graduation in 1976.

Wblle in the Naval · Academy,
"I plan on making It," an ~
Bu.shak
pJayt!d four seuona tor tile ·
timistlc Bushak said Sunday_"I am
Middies.
He pltterned hll atyle Iller
a positive thinker and making the
his
favorite
.play.. Dick Butkus, a
team is the only plan I have at the
time. If
Hall fi Fame llnebtlcker wllo
His task may be fonnldable. The sta~ for the thicaRo Bears.
"I especially admired the way
Browns are el!peC!ed to keep seven
Rutkus
p1ayed with s~ch Intensity. I
tinebackers after the final cutdown
.
try
to
do
the same/' Bushak said.
Aug. 31. Four are likely to be starOn
Sunday,
7,00(1 fans turned out to
ters - Robert L. Jackson, Dick Amwatch
the
two
two-hour workouts at
brose, Clay Matthews and Charlie
Kent
State
University.
Hall.
"I expect it will be Ike riding a
That pits Bushak against veterans
Don Goode, Curtis Weathers, Clifton bike," Buslllk said at the end of the
Odom, Bill Cowher and John day. "Once you do it, you don't
Mohring, and rookies Eddie John- forget bow. I plan oo making thi.l
son, Sam Mills and Lawrence team. I regard thl.l aa just another
Savage for three vacancies.
ladder for me to climb.
"I climbed to the top In high school
In Bushak's favor is the presence
of Len Fontes as the Browns' defen- at Valley Forge and was right back
sive backfield coach. He was at the bottom when I got to tile Naval
Bushak's mentor at Annapolis and Academy.
helped bting him to Cleveland.
"I climbed to the top there and
Bushak also tried out with Dallas, now I'm at the bottom again. I plan
Kansas City and San Diego, and got to climb back up now that I'm with
an offer from the Cowboys.
the Browns," he said.

NFL clubs prepare for preseason

OLDEST ROOKIE - Cle\'elaod Browns rookie
linebacker Andy Bushak . left. grabs another Browns
rookie, running bark Tom Bennett (40 1during the mor-

By The Associated Press
:-.ational Football League teams
cut rookies, signed draft choices and
prepared to welcome old hands to
training camp with less than two
weeks remaining today before the
start of preseason.
The Hall of Fame Game between
the Cleveland Browns and Atlanta
Falcons on Saturday, Aug. I at Can·
ton, Ohio marks the start of the 198162 preseason. Most of the 28 NFL
teams. however, must wait until
Saturday, Aug . 8 to begin the
e&lt;hibition season.
In preparation for their season
opener, the Falcons cut three free
agents - including Texas AX M run·
ning back Michael Wright - and
welcomed a full contingent of

Bushak. at 27, is the oldest rookie in the Browns camp
- ha\'ing srrved a fi\'e year stint in the Navy after
graduating from Annapolis in 1976. f AP Laserphoto 1.

ning workout at their training camp Monda)· in Kent.

Charlies
bombard
Mud Hens

Today's

Sports World
By WUI Grimsley
AP Correspondent

By The Associated Press

the parties in this nying circus
ca lled st rike negotiations have ma r -

ched off to Washmgton . tw()-by-two
prooo bly . 1n a sort of modern-day
Noa h's Ark operated by l.&lt;~bor
Secretary Raymond DonOv(;ln.

responsible. Instead of agreeing to
gu tu the press room. ste p in front
the

mi crophones

and

11f

make a

m an orde r h· fash ion
Dono1.: an chose tu carry ur1 a runnin~
news conference Hl ttle lnbb'" of the
hote l. The media had to s~rambl e
tha t day. which m ust hnvc bl'en the
we~y Douo1.·an wanted it . But to hi s
s kl t e m~nt

The reas on for the change 1n

credit. the labor secrel&lt;! ry did stop

by fecieral

and help one cameraman who was
knocked down and nearly tram pled
in the sl&lt;::lmpedc .

venue, as

explained

mediator Kenneth Moffett, an otherwise level-headed guy, was to get t he

talks out of the gla re of the med1a. At
last, we have f ound a .sUi ta bl e vtlle~ m

for this swnmer withoot baseoo\1

If Moffett and Dono,·an •:idn 't
want the media co v e re~ge . there wa s

a simple way to avoid Il. Instead

c~

If you buy that explanalion, then

a nnouncing whe re a nd when the

fuly Grebey 1who will be played n

negollations would be held each da r
they could have simpl y pulled tl;~
!&lt;Ilks out of the publi c arena . There

the film vers ion of thi::; epi c by
George C. Scotti and Marv m Miller

1Douglas Fairbanks Jr. in the
movie l are innocent of any guilt in
this ooseball-less merry-g&lt;&gt;-round.
The cause of all the problems says
Moffett 1Dav id Hartman gels this
role i are those nosey folk s with pads
and pencils or microphones a nd

cameras.
Baloney .

are plenty of private fede r al

in New York City

office ~

where the

negotiations could have been held

w1thoutlhe media be ing able to nail
them down

talks in New York C1ly. r'1fteen
floors of a Manhattan hotel
separated the bargammg table from
the press room and no newsman

The match between Rochester and

Riclunond was postponed.

But there was no effort to hide the
neg otiations and, beca use

be~st.' iJCl ll

visability indust r y. the talks a ttracted widespread covera ge. It
sh ould not have corne a::; any surprise to those mvolved .
The negutlntor~ fu r bott1 s idt•s in
thi s tu g of v;ar ar e la bor
profess ion&lt;:Jis . accustomed to the

went upstairs t o force the two s ides

Klare of the spotl ight. They know

to come down . Miller and Grebey
visited the press room 1f. and when .
thev were good and ready to do so.
For the most pa rt. the media was
well-behaved. On the one occasiOn
that demean or br oke down .

how to ha ndle it a nd . in fact. often
tried to use the media lo the ir adv~ ntage .

Among those who lit the
traditional role of neither rookie nor
oldtuner was the Browns' Andy
Bushak, a linebacker. Bushak turned down three scholarship offers
when he graduated from Valley
Forge High School in Ohio and is
trying to make the team after five
years in the Navy.
"I had a long time to think about
this. to prepare for it, so rm ready, "
says the 27-year-old Bushak, who

the first four innings. but settled
do~n and held the Mud Hens
scorclrss over the last fi ve innings.
Cha rleston, "'hich e ntere d the six-

th inning trailmg 3-2. seorcd all six
runs with two outs . Angelo LoGr&lt;:Jn-

de walked to start the rally and
moved to second when La rry Lit-

tleton singled Odi c Dav1s walked to

junior &gt;Oftba ll actwn .
Pomeroy collected IB hils overall
uf Syracuse pitcher Tammy Slats.
Sial&lt; fann ed six and walked 17.
Diane While picked up the win.
striking out five and walking fiv e.
Leading hitters for Pomeroy were

Diane White with lwo triples and a
single, Daphine Dillard with three
singles. Sandy Mattox a tnple, and
De bby Werry a smgle.
Terri Roush. Candy Slats. and Jill

Here's a uniqu e opportunity for you to
earn high Int erest on as little as $2,500
in just 89 days.
Our Ready -Access Fund Is a repurchase agreement between you and
Diamond Savings. Quite simply. we
transfer to you an Interest ln a U.S.
government (or government agency)
security . After 89 days. we re purchase
your agreement fo r what you originally
paid plus int e rest.

Nease each singled for Syrac use.

thr uug ll

()1 1111 ~ 5;1\!l _ ~~ ~-! 1 .16 s. ~- 11 1 111 I l. t .......

IL II:u111 lla ,.

h · Prtt-.'
:\il lt" l"lt .m
}itt· "ol ~ p; t~ ·r PuUh ~h tT' \ ~·' ' ~ lo ll tnn . \a! tllllitl

Hqn t'' l"ttt ;lt tt t" ll r ;111h;u n
ltnr·.! .· \••·nul'. \ , ..,..

Nt•w.-~papo.·t· S: t lt '~. l .n
'r'urk . ~1'.,.. \" " rk !Otll 7
~T'-lA."iT E H

Po lllh ' r " ~

S l~ f. I . E

Sl .OO ·
S·UO

1&gt;2.00

COP\"

PHIC'ES

15 Ct• nt~

D&lt;til~

SUb.~· r JIA·r~ unt li••strmg lu pay tht• t'Hr rtt•t
nwy tt' llll l 11 1 ad\" &lt;~ lln' thtt&gt;o."l It• Tlw Da1ly

Senlitn•l m1 a 3. 6 nr It munth ba~ r .~. Crt•tl tt
)VIII ht.• ~1\'t'll t'llrnt•t t'ad1munlh

No ~ubsc:npli vrL-; by mat I pt'ntllltt.'11mttJwll:i

..·twn• hulllt' L'~ rrier St'f\"ll't' 1 ~ l!. \"iu lablt'

ASTRONG CASE FOR
BUYING AS'tiRL. NOW.

A1ght now w h en you b u y the St 1h l Mode 1 "

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wai led carrymg case
And a Ide a nrllde i1 a ndle. a t:e avy ·::lut y b uckmg wedge S o u nces o! S t1 h l
engll1e :Ill and ou r help fu l f1 rewood bookl et
'
Altoget heJ 11s wort h ever 535 Yours FREE! Now t hai~ a St1hl

6Mooth ................ ~ . . ..

STIHL' POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

T•• Wtrlll's Lattttii•IU"t Ctlaln law.

SJ 1.00 :
121l .OO '

)Year · : ... _. .... ... : · ~~ ..' · :: ·... · ; PJ.r.O. .,

Today'• rate:

13.5%

606 E. Main
Ph . 992 -2094
Pomeroy . Oh iq
Front End Alignment_:SI2.50 Most Pass@nger Cars
~
·
Brake Servir@

per annum

"~o '"1

~

, • We dare yout? com~e! . . , · ~·....1
J
,
t
216 w. Main st. ,
_ . ' , Pomerov. Ol.lo .
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992-6655
.. . '
· ·Mon,'W'"'. 9·4, Thur. &amp; Sat. 9~ Noon .:·
f.

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Friday 9·6

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.Bids
• tl!e rooflllltlt -*d flzlng .
Will tiit r1pe11etl iJn AIIIUit 4 at JIOOII,

Bookmobile schedule fOr Tuaday,
Hopefully, we ean get board actlciQ July 21 - &amp;l«eu Rd., Near 31060,
~0 ~ ' the JoWilt bid 00 these 4:11).4:45 p.m.; Reed• ''le, Reed's
roof• u.t night_in ~ 11JeCia1 meeting Store, W :50! Tuppers t&gt;~a~ns, Arso we may get ~ oo repairs as · baughHouslng, 1:20-7.
soOn there8fter-aa .~ble. In cue
11Juraday, July 23 - Coolville,
YOt! haven't been In any Of the Post,
Office,_ 9 : ~10 : 15 a.m.; Arbuildings ~0 see how bad they are cadia ~uning Home, 10:20-11; Tuplfl!dklng,stop in anytime during the
daY" and
sure the·custodians will pers I:llains, Lodwick's market,
show you the ptoblema.
· 1,1:1! ·a.n\.·12:50 p.m.; Pomeroy,
Health Ca~ Center, 1::J0:.2:30 p.m.;
Letart
• Falls, Effie's Restaurant,
Tidbita Of inf~tlon include:
3:35-4:20;
Racine; Home National
The swruner school project is in
4:45-5:45;
Syiacuse, Pool, 6-7.
Bank,
full swing at the high school and will
Drop
by
your
nearest ~e
run for several more weeks.
stop
for
the
free
entertaimnerit anll'
-- '
Drivers Educatl~- Classes are information. The bookmobile has
being conducted this swnmer .witll paperbacks, 45 and LP record!!,
over 70 students participating.
magazines, large print books and
how to do it help from everything
· ·Students in the' L.D. Class at . from car repair to dieting.
~roy are being tutored, beginntngMondar. July20.

.GROUND
BEEF

I'm

The fence at Middleport is being
pamted by a student working on Carl
Hysell's silrnrner program.

The paint ere is continuing their
work at Mi~ eport Elementary.
Due to the. lay 19 ·~~ling the
special OUist ·paint: the crew will
move ordo · tiSbury lind then to
Salem Center. At Salisbury the crew
will paint !,\~vera! classrooms and
the gymnasiGm. At Salem Center all
classrooms,1 the kitchen and the
I

The bus mechanics are working
hard to get the buses ready for in·
spection. w~ .fl.re going to need a
great deal of nelp in this area during
the next several years as we try to
upgrade our buses.
·
Textbooks will still be a problem
In 1981-&amp; because of continued state
cutbacks and the financial crunch.
If I can be of assistance, please
contact me at !192-2153.

What's Cooking?
· · , . liy Dale Slo~

'

~loa Agl!D~

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Home Ecooomles

Soy Cheese 1

.

You'll. 11e smiling, too;· when you
try some of these recipes featurtng

cheese.. Cheese is a nutritious, con·
centra ted food with protein,
riboflavin (a B vitamin) and
calcium starring in the nutrient iineup. Read the . !abe~ on cheese
packages · to deter.j!ine the
ingredients. Some cheeses are all·
natural, and have qharacteristic
flavor and texture. Processed
cheeses are blends Of fresh and aged
natural cheeses that hilve been
ntelted, pasteurized and milled witll
ail emUlsifier.
·MaYbe you've beard tlie saying
"Tile only place that age counis Is jn
-~--- " A ed
ha
•---~
"'"""""·
g
or 5 rp c•..,.,
usually cost more than · mild ones
beciuse Of the ·~ ca~ Meded to
rtpen iJ!l ~~to develop !l~vor. .
Have . you ever wollder~ about
cheeses.that bi!ciJme moldy? Shollld
you t!Jrow the cheese ou,t 6r trtm off
the mold? ~· answer · Is to com.
. pletely ~ off the moldy swfaces
bi!fore the cheeSe is used. If the mold
penetrates the interior·of the' cheese,
cut· away the .n\_oldy. ,nortions or
disc rtl the
&lt;;;·a .
cheese. 11)ia ~ not Inelude blue or RogilefOrt· cheese
::!u:"~.ls an ~t IM!rt fi
·Proper · care of, cbe'l!se will
eib)1inate many problems. Leave

cheese in its ,original wrilpper, if
·possible. Cover cut surfaces tightly
with waxed paper,.foil or plastic to
protect th't aurf~' ftom llrjing out;
· or stqnr-'the · ~ -·In -. tightly
covered ~~f: .!It: y~ . plan to

store a large piece of cheese for an
extended time, dip the cut surface in
melted paraffin.
HereisaterrlficrecipeforaSwiss
cheese dish thatl call Easy Quiche:
Easy Quiche
4 eggs
'• c. biscuit.mix
'•teaspoonsalt
'• teaspoon pepper
3 tablespoons margarine
3 tablespoons milk ,
1- 13 oz. can evaporated milk
8 oz. finely shredded Swiss cheese
Combine and beat well. Pour into
a 9" pie pan. Top witll ~ slices
bacon, cooked crisp and crumbled,
or thin slices of ham.
Spillacll Qulcbe
After mixing majn ingredients,
fold in one-half, cup squeet.ed dry
cllopped. c,'Oilk\!11 •~.ch. ·T,op wjth
bacOII or hilin. Blike'at 375·\le..:.W..
.,. ~~w
for 25 minutes. Tum oven down to
325 degrees and continue baking for
another 20 minutes or until golden
brown. Let the quiche stand for 10
·minutes after remOVing from the
oven.
Note: Easy Quiche makes its own
crust.
For an easy way to add cheese to
your meals, try cheesy com:
Cheely Com
Cook orie 10 oi. patkage Irozen
corn according to directions or cook
2 cups fi'esb com. Drain, add .j!Blt
and pe(llkr and place in' &amp;n~·oven
proof casserole. Top with four~ one
oz. slices Of processed American
· cheese. Heat in the oven until cheese
is melted.
.
For your copy of "Cheese in

·Mason area personals
·Mr. and Mrs. Denver Blake and
Mr. and Mrs. Andy VanMeter attended the Mountaineer Dinner
Theatre on Thursday evening at
Hurricane. W. Va., and saw the per·
fonnance "Cactus Flower."
Misses Stephanie and Patti Jo
Smith of Lexington, Ky., visited a
week with their grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. ,John Marshall.
Mrs. Muriel Johnson of Midland,
Pa. visited overnight with her
cousin, Mrs. Sarah Spencer. Also
visiting with Mrs. Spencer was
another cousin, Mrs. Helen Duncan.
Mrs. Nessie Moore of New Haven
has returned home alter visiting her
daughter, Mrs. Frances Atkinson, at
Salem, Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Shennan Ford and
their daughter and husband, Mr. and
M1·s. Robert Day went to Detroit.
Mich., where they visited Mr. Ford's
sister, Mrs. Reba Johnson. From
Detroit. they toured Canada and saw
Niagara Falls and other interesting
places in New York and Pennsylvania .

Rutland TOPS meet

The weekly meeting of TOPS. OH
1466, Rutland, was called to order on
Jut~ IS by leader, Nellie Haggy. All
members recited the TOPS Pledge
in unison to open the meeting. Roll
call was taken. Honored as the
weekly best loser was Linda Stewart
with Bernice Winebrenner as runner·up, Mrs. Stewart was present..t
i
r!llbon and .. tlle me~
sang the TOPS Weight Loss Song to
her. Mrs. Stewart lost a total of three
and one-half pouncl!l for the week.
Everyone was reminded to call or
write the persons in her group to in·
spire them on losing weight for the · .
"Groupie Contest."
Leader Nellie Haggy resigned as
leader and Gloria Oiler, co-leader,
took over the position.
Rhonda Daily, R.N ., from
Veterans Memorial Hospital, .lalked
to the group about the wise ways to
lose weight and the importance of a
balance meal and the taking Of
vitamins during dieting. Mrs. Daily
opened the floor for questions. She
had prepared a poster of "Before"
and "After" pictures of herself as
she lost weight. Many points were
received and recorded for the club's
Family Meals" call the Meigs Coun· future reference. Mrs. Daily talked
about the dangers of over the county Extension Office at ~98.
ter diet pills and the etfect they have
on the body. Leader Mrs. Haggy
presented Mrs. Daily with a large
hanging basket fern as a ··thank
you" giftfrom the club.
Anyone wishing infonnation may
call742-3062.

Pha!oi asked for Meig~ Fair

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Bookmobile
Schedule

·-

••••J·Aaoee, ..... Je Dot &amp; aawtace actG...t

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Short term. Your agreement matures

St·ttd itt!dr.·' ·' t u Tilt' Oca tl •

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But. unlike money market funds. the
Interest rat e is fixed at the date of pur·
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pt t~ l.i.t..: l' .l&gt;i lld ,t\ f' llllll'r•'.l lllll "

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F'mlw , 111 C~&gt;url S ln•t•1. b: lilt' Ul11 " \ ';11 1!'1
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A ss •w L &lt;~It•t ll'n · "-' ·\ ~-.•'&lt;t .tlt nll• &lt;!In ! l ilt '

Pomeroy

-ACCESS

Pomeroy rolled to a 16-4 win over

I UHJ'S J4)-91i(JI

Mt'l tl llt'r Tlw

214 E. Main

host Syracuse recently in girls'

A llhisinn of Multimt•di :~ . Jrw .

P llll ll' ftl\

REUTER-BROGAN INS. SERVICE

Eal"\ \\in

The lbih Senti nel

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make it difficult to rebuild a
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Make
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your home is
adequately insured.

r~===========~~=============~~~~==~~;~~

Donovan himself was the pt!rson

Publts llt'd

cinnati ·

~ eason .

Paxton, 6-7, gave up th ree runs in

Po~ I s

happens to be a rather hi gh-

The neg ot iators " ·ere wellinsulated from the merlia du r ing

ternational League baseba ll.
In other II. action Monday night .
Columbus routed Pawtucket 6-1 and
Syracuse whi pped Tidewater 4-2 .

rtm
!.uGrande
of the year
hitin hithe
s seventh
&gt;el'e nth , ahorne
.solo
drin•.

Alan Page of the Chicago Bears
and Jon Keyworth of the Denver
Broncos also had a long time to think
about their careers, and they have
come to slightly different conclusions.
'
Page, an All-Pro or All-NFC
defensive tackle for the past nine
years, 1s entering his 15th NFL
season, and he says it will be his last.
" You usually can 't say for certain
that you will never do something
again in your life," Page said, "but
I'm fairly confident that this will be
my last year playing footooll ."
Keyworth announced his
retirement Monday after seven

seasons with the Broncos. Last
season, he carried the ball only 38
times for 127 yards.
Still another veteran, defensive
end Claude Humphrey, arrived at
the Philadelphia Eagles camp as a
free agent and signed a ·one-year
contract. Humphrey, with 13 NFL
years under his belt, had been wltll
Philadelphia the past two seasons.
Elsewhere, the Houstoo Oilers cut
12 rookies and welcomed veteran
running back Ronnie Coleman to
camp two days early; free agent of.
fensive lineman Steve Gettel walked
out of the Tampa Bay trsining camp
with a foot injury; the Bears signed
veteran cornerback Wentford
Gaines, a free agent from Cin-

IS YOUR HOME INSURED
TO ITS PRESENT VALUE?

benefi ted from s ix runs in the sixth
inning as the Ch&lt;:Jrlies r uuted the
Toledo Mud Hens 11-3 in In-

load the bases , and Jim 1-t:ntine
followt.:'d with a s ingle to score
r ,O{; rcw de.

1976

veteran players to camp Monday r-r:;:;::;::;::;::;:;;;;;;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~
night. The veterans were not
scheduled to begin workouts until
Wednesday, but, like manv other
"oldtimers" feeling the pressure
from below, Atlanta wide receiver
Alfred Jackson started training a
week early.
"Every year I try to set different
goals for myself," said Jackson , who
reported to camp last week in an efToday s spiraling building costs
fort to crack the starting lineup this

Charl eston pitcher Mike Paxton
Now that we 've reac·hed the 40tb
day and 40th mghl Without OOSCba!l.

~hasn ' t played footooll since the
~Qaches All-America Game.

:Local

· IYJ!ll!llium 1rill be ' painted, -ID-

Old rookie tries for spot on
Cleveland :Urowns s&lt;Plad
KENT, Ohio (AP) -

-

'

•3••

Bananas

�-----------------~~~----------------~--------~----~~~------------Page-8

The Datly senttnel

Tuesday. July

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
;

21.1M1

1911

Vin eyard reunto n ___ _ _ ______ ________ ___
POMEROY - The lith annual
Vmeyard larruly reunion was held at
Royal Oak Park recently wtth 65
lanuly members and ltve guests at·
tending
Those present were Raym ond
Vtneyard
Co lumbus
Vtrg tl
Daughtery Spencer W Va Mr
a nd Mrs Quentm Looney , Wa lton
W Va
Mr a nd Mrs Robert
Vmeyard a ndRoy Este re, Fla Mr
a nd Mrs Dorsel Vtne}ard a nd
daug hters Lillie Hockmg E L
Da m e wood Syra cuse , Mr and Mrs
Ste ve Kmg Canton Mrs J ean

Zovath and Julie, Canton , Mr and
Mrs Dale Vtneyard, Tallmadge
Mr and Mrs Ernest p Vmeyard
and Paul . Belpre, Mr and Mrs
John Freer and Joshua and Jacob,
South Bend, Ind
Mr and Mrs James Vmeyar d
Torc h , Mr and Mrs Cecll Smtih
Syracuse Mr and Mrs Kenneth
Cremer a nd Dav1d, Coolvtlle Mr
and Mrs
William Vtne yard
Wooster Mrs Mildred Coihns Canton Mr and Mrs Sherman Sum
merfteid and Tara Little Hockmg
Mrs Mae Vtneyard and Mar) Reed

svllle, Mr and Mrs Gay School·
craft, Akron , Mrs Janet Gilland,
Andrea Melinda and Davtd, Lucas,
Mr and Mrs Larry Creamer, Ttna
and Jell Belpre , Mr and Mrs Ketth
Vmeyard, Tma, Mtssy and Jeannie,
Belpre Mr and Mrs Dar! Sergent,
Charleston W Va
Harold and
Allen Vmeyard, Mtke and Mane,
Brookvtlle Mr and Mrs Paul
Richardson and Steve, Brookvtlle,
Eskey H1ll, Pomerll)&lt; , Mr and Mrs
Earl Swrunerfteld, Murraysvtlle,
Pa Andrea and Renea Ryneer and
Rhonda and Scott Phtllips

Van Meter reunionr_________:_~---....,...-------

and vtsttmg
The reuruon wtll be held at the
same hme and place next year
Those present were Mr and Mrs
Charles H Murray, Mrs Wtlbur
Rowiy , Jr, Mr and Mrs Ketth Ktt
tie and Rod Rowley of Ironton, Ohto.
Jtll Russell Dallas, Texas, Mr and
Mrs Charles 0 Murray. Mary Ellen
and Davtd or Albany Mr and Mrs
Joe Rebecca , J D , Colleen and
Heather or Blacklick Mr and Mrs
Rodney Spencer Jell and Terry, of
Columbus, Mr and Mrs Charles
Fulton of Warnonk, Ohto, Mr and
Mrs Kevm Styer, Chns and Mary.
and Stella Cheva lter
Waterford ,
OhJO Mr and Mrs Davtd Carter.
V1cky and Cathy of Pomeroy Mr

Eskew reunion _______________________________
POMEROY - The Eskew f&lt;tmtly
reun10n was held recently at Forest
Ac res Park A dtnner was served at
I pm
Attendmg were Mr and Mrs
Ralph Frye, Pomeroy, Mr and Mrs
Ralph Frye Jr . Shem and Richard.
Dayton Mayor and Mrs Clarence
Andrews, Laune Wayland, Mr and
Mrs Clarence Andrews Ne" Mar·

or

Followmg a report of the
nonunatmg corruruttee made by
Veda Dav1s, of£tcers were elected
when the Amateur Garden Club met
recently at the horne or Datsy
Blakeslee
Ofllcel's elected were Grace Pratt,
president, Kathryn Swanson, vtce
president, Veda Davts, secretary,
and Bermce Ann Durst, treasurer
Serving as asststant hostess was
Elizabeth Loltse Mrs Blakeslee
opened the meetmg wtth devottons
usmg matenal £rom the book "The
Joy
Gtvmg" wntten by actress

Mr and Mrs Tun Wolf, Tommy and
Shem Wolf
Others attending were Sharon
Swartz , Tena Jenkms, Robm
Russell, Chrtstt and Came Russell,
Coolv1le, Pat Bahr Anita and Scott
Z1eimskt, Steven Bush, Kevm Mtller,
Chrtsll Mayle, Mr and Mrs Dan
Johnson, Enn and Etleen Johnson,
Mr and Mrs John Wells, Athens
Melinda and Johnny Wells,
Flor1da Mr and Mrs Royal Wtlson,
B1ihe Jo Wtlson Roseville, Mr and
Mrs Bob Koren, Pat, Todd and
Davtd Koren Niles Mr and Mrs

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Layette fare
honors Robin
Riffle recently
A Ia} ette shower was held recently honormg Robm Dugan R11fle at
the home or Debt Honaker
Games were played wtth pnzes
betng won by Patty Carson, Penny
Wilson Delores Tyree, Sue Little
and Sybtl Rtlflt The door pnze was
won by Mae Young
A baby buggy cake baked by
Sharon Stewart was served wtth
nuts, punch and cof£ee to those
named and Donna Young, Debi Hen·
sley Kelly Tyree, Sherry Wtlson,
Maxtne Dugan, Amber Young, Nora
Pnce, Lon Faulk, Ruth Ann Faulk,
Ruth Ann Spaun Lisa Jet!, Betty
Snuth
Sendtng gtlts were Sherry Wilson
Bea Dugan, Shirley Colhns, Mtldred
Johnson Isabelle and Jenmler
Couch
Edna Russell Barbara
Dugan Gertrude Mttcheli and Sybil
Ward

•
CARRIE- Carrie Ann Gillilan
"as recently honored on her
seventh birthday at the homt of
her grandparents, Mr and Mrs
James Carter, Reedsville A
strawberry shortcake was used
Attending In addition to her graodmother, Vtrglwa Carter "ere
her parents, Bill and Sandra
Gtllilan, her brother. Tony
Gillilan. her grandmother Mary
Gtllilan Jimmy Carter ~e
Gtllilan, Gract John and Jay
Holsmger, Aodrea Rockhold.
Letita Holsinger, Brent Batley.
Honey Ftelds Jamie Brandon
aod Amy Wells Sendmg gifts
"ere Ttnn and David Gumpf

\ +H ( lull em t J un~ 20 at lht Pit

! t T Tt sUlt lllt

Utr~

;.~ nd

"1 \ h lhTt' t' a thiSU r.l

~t

ILIIU

II til l

altt&gt;ndoanlt A dtmun

\\-1 • l l.stturs 1n
~·'

t&gt;n bt H• bt n Ptllzer t~ lx•u t :.,tft h
1 h v.\ 111 \i.tkt bro\olnlt' ~o l tt'lll' tf

ntll '" 10oas
tnl aht unt

lJlJ.o;tno ;,, th stusst&gt;&lt;l cru ludt&gt;d makln)! plows fur il
tn p W hat ~ m l ht Ot•x v.as t'fi Jt Htl bt tht

lub f• r ru n at on Rd rt.'l hlllt'JIL'i V.t' Tt :w nt&gt;d
[)1 tht Plll t n
Sl. ctt Tru.'\.'i tll Repurtl r

Tht \I

B ••Hht-s t H llu b cud Jun• 2 1 &lt;1!
l1&lt;11 1d i:l nrl 1\ r1' h n Bn )! ID rn 1dmu Thtrt

n n'P

t\)lkn :~

and

Subm&lt;~rmt

Tuna Sand\ltlhts
1H rt tht&gt;n pnparul b\ Knstt&gt;n Kml( Trau
f&lt;t:~ lt
Mdamt Btt ~ lt Mars~ Km~&gt;: Path
Pn rkt&gt;r and Kalh\ Park t'r f' lt' ld Htkt: ~ "t n. tn
J UH I Ill Paul m ~ l Mtkt Iiiii Jun JOt' anti 1\hkt
Pt~ rktr Tt rn Sm11h nn d Bt'l'~lt and Kt\111
Km" Htftt !iiumnl-; .,. rt Mr.t d b\ 8&lt;~rbltrt
Bt t&gt;)tlt ~htlt tht 1:1rh 11 tht ub as.stshd - I 10.
Pa rk• r Ht r1t r

rx

Tht ~h1 ~ s &lt; u 1t Htlltr II" "' ~tk (Jub tlttl
Junt' 22 tl tilt U b l.tt f t'il dtn tt "1th um r1tl
• tsnr t~nd hrt t t 111111)1 r -; 11il lh rwhmt l' Tht' t lu b
Jil t ml&gt;t'r~ I st u ~o;td lht Dt~t n S'At't'pSlakt&gt;s al
tht !llttlln~: \ d u nu n ~tra t u n ~~ta s p H il b\ Bnb
! A.'l un rntlk lnt;! h t hntqut~ Rtfn shuttnb ~~tt ft
tht•n stru t! b1 ~1r s i .t't'
Ka th1 P a rktr

lhpnrhr

nx

ukt t np•rlt1r

~-: s

v.tn \ll. tl arl t i ~ urs nul 1 ~ lll t ln btr ~ 111 a t
It ndant t Tht &lt;\ub dLst u ~'K'd plat t&gt;s I • ~·· r •r
t a rnp111 ~ and fish nj! at tht lllt't'tln~ OalJ ltrtl

S.. lt"tn ( t nh r

~H

Salt'lll Ct&gt;nlt:r F'!rl"hnust

( lub net Jul\ I at tht
\I I Ut t~~o t t

ad \ tsnrs a nd IIJ

mtm~rs m a ttt'ndanr~

dt"'.:orl!ltJonll

Tht' dub "'lrkt-d on
fur tht' Fourth ul Jul\ pc~radt' at tilt&gt;

uwetlnl( Benn) Goodm.11n

~t&lt;~H

a lltornunstrllUon

on wood and tool!! Rfrrtshrnt'nl"l Wt!rt' sft'\!t"d b\
P~n) Ht."n!lll.') TAl' d ub lht:n tnJu\td pht} l"'
frb~ fur rt't.rtiltlon Tmum Wnjiiht
Rl'p)f'tl'r

'l'ht" Mel.,:s Ro"dlfs """ Clu b m~t Juh 6 ill
Mart(MM. Parkf!'r 1 honw "llh twu 11dusurs and
nint rrwmbthl Jn attendant.~ A repuT1 b\ each
nwmbrr was )tJ\am on $Xntlhmg doni!' 111 ont of
therr pnljecb A cooldnl dernorult.ralion was
l(tvd4 by ktth) Parker Krtsll"'l Ktng and Tract
Castb Rucktli wtre tt~n fired b~ Jim and Mike
Parlier Ttn')' Smatt'l Kevin Kmc and David
~ko .._r.. rrl P1rkfr and tht l(lrb in ttw
ctub wned rtfruhnwn.. and IIVftblll WIJ en""~•
•II'"' - Joe P1rker R.-r •

1 h F.r ~ l'lt h F.nuul!h 4 H Club 1111.&gt;1 lunt !:'! tl
lht P rl Wulf rt!ildl'OC.~ Tht rt 'AI'ft '""ad\ llit•rs

I\Itt jUJl\Of

J t&amp;~dn~

and llt:hl

IIIUIIbt f S In

II

Tuppt'NIIft' Du lt'r Dnlttt Justtt't' at
lt ndtd tht' llled lll~ and dcmun.stralt.'d Tup
JM rAetn pr ldutb In th1 rnembt r5 Tht t lull
dnt dt"d tu stll Tuppt"rwHn ror l\lo ~tt~k s a ~ H
n tnt ' m&lt;~km ~ prUJt'&lt;'l Rl'frt!shmi nts ~o~t rt t~n
:-&gt;&lt;. ntdt• t ht t lub lht&gt;rwxtnwttln~:~ttllbt ht ld
lui\ fl at l ht Pl'l W &gt;If homt Tht nw n lwrs an• lt
hd1 t tht: 1r prtl)tt Is tumpldt'fi ll\ t hl.!&lt;illlt't'hn~ ~~ h ~ ~rlltr Rt'poMtr

II r tlant

t

Tht' H 1llbrlh~ ~ H Club

tnt1

Ju~

!2 lit Citrla

a nti RLtk\ Rift's rt&gt;sld~tnll ~o~tthnneud\rsur and
h ur m c mbt&gt;rs In .altt&gt;ndunu Itcmll of busmt&gt;s~
In&lt; ludt'll 1 flout fortht: Fuurth of Juh paradt ;u.U

JUdJ.:mJ( dates fur food tnd

t

luthtnr.:

pl't)JI.'tlli

H.efrt&gt;:.tunt&gt;nl1 •nn Sl'n.t'd v.hlth mc:luded hot

dul(s saucf l ~St' t hlp!i cooktts and Iced lt'a
Ftshmtt \las also cnJ 1\ t'd b\ tht' dub tnt'mber.;
T~ nt'xt IIH."ehnt~ 111 tll be htold un Ju l) \ J at the
Bt&gt;tt\ Ann I)J(fts resldenct&gt; Oemorustrallons \I ill
bt .1(1\ l&gt;n b\ Bill D) er All Amencan Foods Bf!'tty

l..oflt$ Outdoor Cooker) I ~tnd Mark
McGuire All Arntncan FOUI.b Members are tu
brin~ c001plrled Je\\Jntt and cook!~ booQ to

- Opallh fr Ad\ltsor

The Salem Ct!nt.r 4 H Club held a

mHtm~

JUM 13 Ml the Salem Ct nttr Frrehous~ "tth ooe

ad\ lsvr anti su club members tn allendance
The club elected uffiCt'r.t set datfsand plAct fvr

rrfttlng
Wrt~ht

11nd al!lo chOR proje&lt;&gt;I.S -

Repurll!r

Timm)

Thl! M~•r. Count) Better Uvntock Dall') Club
rnPl June at tbf TM) CamatuJn residence with
ont adVl80r and flvt memben In attendance Of
ficen were electfd al lhls IJlMting: and .,. u

follows prnidenl ,. BOO l.ee VIet prtsklent

Otan ColwtU ~t)'. ~ Parlier
treulftr, Jim Pai'bt ~.kith)' Parker
"'"':-'
"\t--.1
~
fl&lt; hoallh and 111fol)' ~ J.,. and Mlk•
l'lrlu!r Tbll cl•~ allcl ~ pn&gt;J..., tu be
110! liloipC...ill a.tl•r !Jv..todllloln Club liken
- K•illl l'lltcr, Reiortor
met Jul) 7 allht l.tll!nd Parker resi~ C&gt;ftto

•

'

.

•

•'

r-----------------------

:I Curb Inflation.
: Pay Cash for
I
: Claulfleds and
!
Savelll

~

Classifi..-d Pagt&gt;s cover the
following tt•lc•phone exchanges ...
Gallia Co Aree1 Code
Me1gs Co Area Code
614
614
446-GalltpOIIS
992- Middleport
367-Chesh•re
Pomeroy
388- Vtnton
985-Chester
245-ReoGrande
343- Portland
379-Walnut Orst
147-Letart Falls
256-Guyan D1st
949- Rac•ne
643-Arabla Drst
142-Rutland
Mason Cow va
Area Code 304
675- PI Pleasant
458- Leon
576- Apple Grove
773- Mason
882-New Haven
895- Letart
937- Buttalo
TO PLACE AN AD CALL
In Calha County

1n Meags County

446-2342

992·2156
In Mason County

675-1333

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

RENTALS

•-c 1 r110f Tl\lnlu
2- ln Memoriam
l-AnrtOUnctmtnll
.-Gtvtaway

41 _HOuse, tor ltenl

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
It-HelP Wanted
12 - S•h~tttd wanltd
U-lnsuranc:e
14-IUSifltU Train1n1
lJ-Scftools llt~lruction
lt-Rad10 TV
&amp;

eFINANCIAL

21
Zl

l

:13
24
25

2
3

26
27

A reading "Born aut of Fatth" was
read by Mn1. Ervtne; · Our Country" by Beulah Aulher!On; "One
Day at a T1111e" by Mn Beegle:
Daybreak" by Helen Goett; "My
Journey" by Nondus Hendricks,
Perfect Peace" by
Gheen, "Steltdfast Heart" by
Kay Yost, "The Bend In the ·.;:::'::f.' l~·'
by Marjorie Grimm, and "ll'rld.o•v ' P
Afternoon, Downtown
by
Mrs. BeesJe. Get weD
were
signed for Phyllla and Otia s.lley

-------

-----

---

- - · - - --

10
11
12
13

......_ ____

~

- - ---

28

4tc

PUbliC Notice
DELINQUENT
LAND LIST
In compli ance w •th the
prov1Srons of
Sectton
5721 03 Rev• sed COd• of
Oheo
there
w•ll
be
ubllshed durtng the next
ew weeks, •n thes news
paper, a list of the
delinquent real estate '"
Mergs County OhtO upon
whtch
the
taxes
assessments and penalttes
or e rther have not been
patd for two consecut1v e
tax pavrng penods
If delinquent ta)(es are
pard rn full or arrangemen
ts made w1th the County
Treasurer to pay not later
than 48 hours before sa•d
publicatiOn the r,arcel wtll
be removed
rom the
delinquent list before ad
vert1stng
Howard E Frank
Me1gs County
Audrtor
ill 21. ltc

r.

2

In Memoriam

IN MEMORY OF OUR
SON AND GRANDSON,
RICK W SNIDER,
WHO DEPARTED
THIS LIFE 10 YEARS
AGO, JULY 21$1
A heart of gold stopped
beahng, Two1 ~htnmg
eyes at rest God broke
our hearts to prove to us
He only takes the best
God tc nows you had to
leave us, but you drdn't
go alone, for part of us
went wrth you the day he
took you home To some
you are forgotten, to
others 1ust part of the
past, but to us who loved
and lost you, your
memory will always
last
It's a lonsome
house wtthout you ind
sad has been the way,
tor lrfe and home are not
the same stnce vou were
called away
What
would we geve tf we
could say' Hello Son" rn
the same old way, to
hear your vo1ce to see
you sm1le So tf vou have
a son or daughter,
chert~h
them
wtth
lovtng care For you'll
never know the hear
tache unht you see therr
vacant chair

Roal Estote- ~nero I

lor Rtnt
U-A~t~rtmenhlor

Re"l
u - Furnlshed RC»&gt;ms
u - s.-ce tor Rent
41- Wanlfll lo Rent
U - f.qu1pment for

51 - HoUiti\OICI GCK1111
S1- CB TV RIIIIOE.urpmtnt
U - A..t iqUtl

S4- MIIC Merchand111
SJ- lulld•nv Su.. plltJ
S.- P1m tor hie

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
' 1- F 11 rm EQutprnut

u - w•nted to luy
72- Trucltslor hie

Opporttmlly
22- MOII•W to L.. n
2.1-ProteuiMal
Strvices

U - Hav &amp; Grau'

,e REAl ESTATE

7I - Aot•' tor Salt&gt;

tor Sate

Reru

eMERCHANDISE

U-t.•vestoclt
U - Sted I Ferlihrer

•TRANSPORTATION

,J- Va1U&amp;4W D

14- Motorcycles
n - Auto Pa rll
&amp; Acceuortu
11- Auto Repau

It - Nom• lmproveme"h
12 - Piumlunt &amp;

•~- E•u"'~'"''

bcave1int"

r t4- Ete-ctrlul
&amp; Rtfrlgeratton

• .. I

•

....... ..u....

BISSEU
SIDING 00.
Beauttful Custom
8u11t Garages"
Call for free s1d1ng
est1mates, 949 2101 or
949 2860
No Sundily Calls
3 11 lie

1'--------....;,--'

DOZER WORK

C. R.' Mash
Construction

CAT~

Custom K ttchens Ap
Pi•ances
custom
Bathrooms Remodelin
g Plumb.ng Electr1c.
Heating

Farm Ponds · Land
Ciearmg · Roads
Call:

PUlliNS
EXVACATING
992·2478

Free Estimates
992-6011
992-7656

or
Blame Mtlhoan

985· 3965

ROOFING
All types ol root work,
new or repatr gutrers

and downspouts gutter
cleantng and parnttng
All wor~ guaranteed

BARNEITS
WELD SHOP
•Steel • Alumenum

•
Castmg • Trarler H1t
ches
•
Metal
Fabncat•ons
Monday Fnday
4pmtol1pm

All Day Saturday

Free Esttmates
Reasonable Pnces
Call Howard
949 1861
949 2160
1 4

PH. 949-2285
ttc

HOWARD
ROTAVATORS
HJ SD"- 20 lD H P
HA 60"-25 60 H P
HE 60"-45-80 H P
All MOdels Avaelabte

LEO MORRIS

Located at Maplewood
Lake'" Ractne
7 17 1 mo

MillER
SERVICE
For a II of your wtr
mg needs.
Let George Mdter rheck
your present dectncftl
5 y!llem

Restdenttal
&amp;CommercJal
Call742 3195
or 992 7680

Rt 1 5&lt;de Hill Rd
Ruttand, Oh10
PH 742 2455
5 11 tic

1 H II

ALL STEEL

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

Farm Buildings
Sues
• From 30x30 '
SMALL

and ttome Maantenance
• RoofiMg of all types

Utility Buildings

• S1drng
• Remodeling

• Free estimates
e20 vrs experrence

su~es

•

11-General Htuhnt
U - M H Re...-lr
11- Upholsftry

NEW LISTING - Ap
prox 21 acre farm plus
newly remodeled .c
bedroom home, l•v•ng
den1ng room. l&lt;ltchen,
bath, stor~e room
Barn
and
other
bulld~ngs $45,000 00
OWNER WILL CON
SIDER LANO CON
TRACT - on th•s large
family home or set up as
duplex for rental 1n
vestment, .c be-drooms, 2
baths carpet•ng, kif
chen ~quipment some
furmture $33,000 Oil
'
NEAR MINE f I - 3
bedroom ranch on 21 2
acres MOdern krtchen
and ltvrng room, storage
shed, garder1 area
$32,000 ()()
II ACRES OF YARD24x60 oouble w•de
equ1pped kitchen W1lh
d1sllwsher. utii \IY room
with waSiler and dryer,
3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
plus family
room
$37,'100 Oil
TRAILER AND LOT IN
RACIN,E 12x65 mob1le
nome with 2 DedrOOf!lS
equipped
k1tch~n
stor891' buildno, on ap
prox
1 15 acres
$II ,000

Oil

from 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt l, Box 54
Ractne Oh
Ph 614 843 1591

TOM HOSKINS
Ph 949 2160

6 15 ft c

1 Stic

Real EstAte

OONSTRUCTION
ttomes • ex·

New

lenstve
remodel·
mg.
• Electrtcal work
• Roofing work ·
13 Years
Expertence
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
6 3 I mo

GenerAl

Hou sing
Headquarters

T

REESE~
TRENCHING
SERVICE
Water Sewer Electnc
Gas Lrne D1tches
Water Lrne Hook ups
Sephc Tanks
county Cerfrf1ed
Roush lane

V I R G ll B S R ";..II,.,;,

216 E Second Street
Pho.1e
1-(614)·992·3325

Chesh~re

~ Modern
fr~tme only a few

vrs old 4 bedrooms
ceram 1c bath wdh
shower nat gas F A
furna ce full bclS&lt;'ment
w•th frtmtly room Car
pettnQ ltlrQ c porch rmd
n1cc lot near P 0
S37 500
BARGAIN 3 bedroom
home 11"1 M1ddleport
Modern bath lots ol
wood cab•"
the ktt
chen
A fur
nCI Ct" ~ ... 9C pOrLh
garage and storage
Ask,nq S18 500 Offer
welcomed
RACINE
3 or 4
bedroom home
bath
wtth shower nat Qas
F A furnace and cen
tral ~ ~1rr cond ltton1ng 4
porches
c- t ove &amp;
refngerator tn large k1t
Basement carpeting
ctty water and 66 of an
acre S48.SOO
EXTRA NICE - L1ke
new 3 bedroom ranch
Family room Wtth
heatolator fireplace
sun deck large porch
and large WOOd&lt;td lot
Ntce carpet.ng and dbl
f1nrshed garage
REMODELED - Lots
ol n ice carpetrng, 3
bedrooms.
formlca
bat~,
elec baseboard
heat, 2 porches pallo
g~rden and n•cely cared
lor IOI SJ5,000
,
l40 ACRES - Fenced,
some tarm land. lots of
deer and other wildlife
Several good spots tor
ponds 10 room home 2
tfult bcltns. ~ tree gas,
gantge, and otl!er
butldlngs
Owner
anxr'ous to sell
NJC~ (II..OER HOME 7 room's 1. 3 t;ledroom$
nice carpellpg, bath,
built .n kit w1tn

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"
- Addonsand
remodeling
- Roof1ng and gtJtter
work
- Concrete work
- Piumbrng and
electr.cal work
(Free Esttmates)

...,Q.,."0

~~~,~~fn~::~,

Oh

Ph 367 7560
I 7 1 lt c

V. C. YOUNG II
991 6215 or 992-7314
Pomerov. Oh

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smallest
Heater Core to the
Largest Rad1ator
Rad1ator Spectahsl
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs E xper1ence

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS HtC.
Ph

57 lie

KPJP Th•i Aa tor Future Relerl!nce

APPLIANCE SERVICE
Calli&lt; en Young

P.D.IlTSANOSERVtCE
ALL MAICES

•

eOryu'

e 0 shwa~h l.'r~

•R~nqe'

eHoiWo'llcr

O o ~pouu

r11nk\

Rl'PII Ir tn' SHtC£' 195J
Con

L~undrt £&gt;\

v

Rcnloll P r oper IE,
Apt HOU \ ~ Own ~ "
MOb il I' HOm t' P•rk'&gt;

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
• Backhoe

• E•cavatrng
• Septic Systems
• Water, Sewer &amp;
Gas Lrnes
• Olfmp Truck
• rrencher
Ltcensed &amp; Bonded

PH. 992-1201
5 21 rtc

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

Vmyl &amp;
Alummum Stdmg
• Insulation
• Storm Doors
a Storm Wrndows
• Replacement
Wtndows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph 992·2772

IROGER HYSEll'S
GARAGE

-Auto and Truck
Repatr
- Transmtss,on
Repatr
Hrs : Mon ·Frt
9 a m.·S 30 p.m .

992 5682
10 7 ti c

lHE PH010
Classified Ads
brln&amp; wou
extra cash
for
shapp 1n&amp; sprees

Rial Estate
'

Generol

y

BIG AP_PUANCE
. ' ~.E'AT
POMEROY

·~
, I 114·n2 2111
FrHlan
~
Refrl. .rators
wu!Mrs'Dryers
Air C.,..itl-rs

...._.

•

Alii
R'IIOIMIIIII
~

f:IN"" clDSEQUT
'

1)1' SH~Uill
Make An Ollar

PLACE
-Portraits
-Weddings
-Anntversartes
-Passports
- 1nd Now, an •mpresslve, comPlete line
of weodd1ng and an·
nlversarv tnvetat.ans
and
accessories
Reasonably
priced,
qu1ck service.
-Look
w•thout
obllgatton.

Bol\1. Charlene
andJayhe

Hoeflich
109 High St , PoomorOY

LAFF · A · DAY

r . - - - -- -

ProfelliOflll
Servlc..
P 1ano and Organ lessons,
Mary
l•m•ted open•no•
Lucas, cal\4-46 9117

Tuesday Wednesdey Thur
In L.oving Memory of Ethel sday, 9 &gt; Bedspreads,
G Russell who passed Draperies , un•forms
away July 21, 1978
mtsceiiBneous 1tems 9
WELL. drilling, bolh rotary
\
Potnt
Irs been three years since Walnut Street,
&amp; c able tools, usually wells
Pleasant
you went away
1n 1 day Call Ray Beagle
To be with GOd above
JO.t 195 384 l
But we still remember
every day
Public Sale
I
STARKS Tree Trimming lo
The tenderness of your
&amp; Auction
Shrub servtce
Insured
love
Phone 304 576 2010
Neals Auction Hogsett,
We can still see your WVA Rl 2 Every Sat 7 00 •
PM
(Cons i gnments
Are ~ouSt Kt th1s 1s
sm11ing face,
. . . . . ....
And feel your gentle touch , taken), (will buy furniture) Arnu ld Sl h warzr. n ri,~ l r got
Lonn•e
Neal367
7101
As If you are reaching
31
Homes for hie
down from heaven's place
And, oh , It means so much
NEW CABIN or small
9
Wonted to Buy
home
completely fur
n1shed $3900 Call 446 0390
$CASH'
Now you are walkmg with
11
HelpWanted
FOR YOUR FURNITURE
the Lord
ONE PIECE
But your presence ts
House wrth a creage for
Woman to stay wath elderl)' sale,
OR HOUSE FULL
sometimes felt here
3 or 4 bdrs, tully car
lady
tn
Cottageville
on
COME TO
You left us with a tresure
peted 2 barns 379 2258 or
weekend
Phone
304
372
42 OLIVE &amp; SECOND
The memories of you we
319 2343 after 6PM
3398 Cottagevrlle, WV
OR CALL
hold so dear
«6-4775
OPEN9T05
The memones are alive
Secretary and recephontsf New 3 bdr house w1th
and true
good typ1ng skills requ 1red garage and full basement
each and every day
Write P 0 Box 177 Pt $45 1100 C all 4-46 0390
WANT TO BUY Old fur
No, we' ll never forget you
n1ture and Ant•ques of all Pleasant
3 bdr home kif
dtn1ng
Or your thoughtful ways
kmds, call Kenneth Swain
rm
liVIng
rm
With
Sadly m•ssed by 256 1967 1n the even1ngs
Frrendly Home Toy Part1es ftreplace
large famrly
Fam1\y
now tn our 26th year 1S ex
w1th woodburner 1
pandrng to your area and room
~EATHER
BEOS WAN
1/ 2 baths
fenced 1n
l
Announcements
has
openmgs
tor
managers
TED, ANY CONDITION
backyard
ntee barb q
and dealers Party plan ex
and c1ty schools Call
SWEEPER and sew•ng MISC BOX 6S AURORA
penence helpful Car &amp; area
4-46 2003
machine repatr, parts. and \NO 47001 GIVE DIREC
phone
necessary
Call
supplies
Pick up and TION WILL. CALL SOON
before 5 p m to ca rol Day
delivery , Daves Vacuum
6 rm &amp;. bath on large lot
collecl518 489 8395
Cleaner, one half mrte up CASH PAID for clean late
Oak H1ll Oh Washer &amp;
Georges Creek Rd
Call mOOel used cars Sm1th
dryer lllr cond Call 682
4-46 0294
Bu•ck Pont1ac GAII1pohs
7414 after 1PM
12
Stfuaftons
Wanted
Oh10 Call"-46 2282
Custom brush hogg1ng
Cleland Greenhouse ts now
Large 2 story stone home
Post hole d1ggtng 742 2511
open Vegetable plants Standang t1mber Call 388
well rnsullated with 3 large
tomato plants, bedd1ng 9906
bedrooms one full bath 2
plants, pots and hang,ng
Wanted to do Housework l/2 baths formal danmg
baskets
Gera ld ene BEOS IRON , BRASS old •n Chester Tuppers Pla•ns room newly remodeled ktt
Cleland Rac1ne Ohto
furnrture
go ld silver Pomeroy , Middleport 992 chen but It en tncludtng d1sh
6331
washer, basement wtth
dollars, wood 1ce boxes
work shop 2 c ar garage
ATTENTION LADIES''' stone tars ant1ques, etc
Help pay off those un Complete
households
BUILDING and c arpentry wrth work shop large gar
wanted btlls worktng Wrrte M 0 M1ller Rt -4, and remode l1ng Phone304 den 2 porches 548 Grant
St
M•ddleport $59 ,500
even1ngs from 7 30 to 10 30 Pomeroy Oh Or 992 1760
675 2440
want tng qu1ck sale to settle
p m as a fashton stv l•st
estate Call 614 384 3809 for
Earn $8 00 to $10 00 per CHIP WOOD Poles ma•
Ideal tor dtameter 1~' on largest Three vear old patr Reeve appointment lAffer 1PMI
hour profat
Pheasants a lso tno Srlver
homemaker wtth fam•IY end S12 50 per ton Bundled
Pheasants Phone 675 4367
Cal\992 3941from 9 6
Remodeled 2 story house 3
slab
SlO SO per ton
bedrooms upstatrs butlt tn
Deltverct to Ohto Pallet Co
13
Insurance
k1tchen d1nmg room large
LONEL.Y
Chr~stlan Rock
Spr 1n gs
Rd
Stnoles
Meet Chnst tan Pomeroy 'I'll 2689
SANOY AND BEAVER In hvrng room, utrlrtv room
bath
Frame
s tngles •nvour area Wrrte
surance Co has offered pantry
buildtng and 2/ 3 a c re lot
Southern Chrrsf1an Stngles Gale
serv.ces
tor
f1re
1nsurance
Stiver
ster11ng
Club, PO Box 1823, Sum 1ewelr y nngs old co1ns &amp;. coverage m Gallta County W lltng to negot•ate prrce
merville, SC 29483 or call 1 currency Ed Burkett Bar
for a lmost a century 992 7719 '"Bradbury
803 871 9850 24 hours
Farm home and personal
ber Shop Mtddl eport 992
property coverages are 2 stor y house w1th attached
3476
ava il ab le to meet rn Single &amp; 5 car garage Jlh
d tv 1dual needs Contact baths, J bedrooms, large
HARPER
HALSTEAD Lew1s Hughes
agent I r stone ftreplace fully
SALVAGE CO 11th and Phone446 3318
carpeted On 1 acre of
Vtilnd Street now buytng
ground located 1 mrle out
metals (copper
brass
on 143 off Rt 7 bypass 992
AUTOMOBILE
IN
alum.num, lead stamless
been can 7040
stee l
batter1es and SURANCE
Lost
your
rad•ators, gtnseng yellow celled.,
operator
s
L1
cense'
Phone
Older home rn ttle country
root c atmp and sassafras)
w1th 2 J acres 4 bedrooms,
10 am to 6 pm da •IY Also 992 2143
bath garage
Centrally
Flea Market on Saturdays
16
Rad1oTV__ _
located to all 3 m•nes
CAI\675 S868
$17 500 742 2502
&amp; CB Repaar
Old furn,ture stone tars
RON S TV SERV ICE
Modrfted A frame 3 bdr 2
copper kett les and other
Spec•aliztng 1n Zen1th baths carpet Sprtal statrs
types of anttques Phone
House Calls Now serv1c 1ng c~rcutar stone ftreplace a
446 3925
Motorola Qucuar Ca ll 1 acres Call m 77.41
304 576 2398 or 4-46 2454
ANY PERSON who has
EfRBIIpMBHI
1978 Sw1nger one and one
anythtng to o•ve away and
half bath f~replace Phone
18
Wanted to Do
ser lees
does not offer or attempt to
304 675 5672 2 m11es out
offer any other th10g for
D J s LAWN MOWER Jencho
sale may place an ad •n th 1s
REPAIR
On
Ne1gh
Help Wanted
column There wrll be no 11
borhood Rd a ll makes se r
charge to the advert•ser
WANTED Lease men, to vrced Spec 1a l1z1ng 1 n Lawn 2 bedroom a•r cond•t•oned
Boy
Blades sharpened llurn.osnoea. out of town on
leasae 01 1 and gas proper
Call 446 4425 after 5 p m Rt 2 Small depostt Phone
7 yr old whtte female 11es GAII ra and surroun
Amencan Egkenu Spttz deng counttes tnqu 1re to P1ck up and del 1very 304 675 6277
dog family movrng Call Great Bend Od Inc 269 available
- - --- - - - -Lower
Rtver
Rd
446 3948
For sa le or rent 9 room
Gallipolis Caii.C46 4285
cerf1f1ed Clerk Typ1st w111 house Park Dnve SJ25 per
do lyp,ng Call 367 76 15 month Phone 304 675 2885
KITTENS 91;, weeks 446
anyftme (80 cents per
NURSING
RN
LPN
-«127
page )
s1mtlar medtcal tratn1ng
l2
Mobale Homes
complete Paramedtcal
for Sale
2 yellow t1ger stnpe 1 to
Exammat1ons for the In TV serv•ce calls Call 992
be•ge k1ttens Call 2-1.1 5804
REDUCED
used
PRICES
surance companre!. 1n 6176 or 992 2034 Also used
mob1le homes and travel
GallaPOIIS part trme
color TV for sale
trailers
TRISTATE
6 k1ttens, 3 t1ger stnpe 2 Arrange own schedule
MOBILE HOMES CALL
twinS and 1 pure black Call Tra1n1ng prov1ded
Ex
4-46 7572
446 067S or see at 3 Garf 1eld ce ll ent pay
For ap
Ave
pl•cl'tton and comp lete tn
tormafton ma11 one page
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL S
COLLIE and Coonhound resume to L1fedata 2200 E
Busrness
Sunsh1ne, SpnngfJeld, Mo
QUALITY
MOBIL.E
Puppies 992 2770
-~rtun1ty
65804
HOME SALES. 4 Ml
LAWN &amp; Garden Equtp WEST GALLIPOLIS, RT
3 k1ttens All females 244
ment Sales &amp; Serv.ce 35 PHONE 4-46 3868 or 4-46
FRIENDLY
HOME
Toy
Sycamore St Mtddleport
7274
Parttes now •n our 26th Owner w•shes to rettre
year ts expandtng to your lnqu.re at Ourdoor Equ1p
Dog House 992 5204
area and has opemngs •or ment Sales .Jet Rts 7 &amp; 35
n tnde 12)(60 mob•le home,
managers and dea lers Gallipoli S or phone 446
79 Dodge van a 18x36
Party plan e&gt;~pere~nce 3670 tor appotntment
KITTENS 304 675 1138
garage 3 acres of land
- - - - ---- helpful
Car &amp; phone
$1611110 00 or best otter Call
388 8747
Thre,.. k1ttens, wh•te wtth necessary Call befor""' 5 For sale by owner Coun
blue heads ;,nd tails Phone p m to Carol Day collect try Grocery Store gas - - - -- -S18 489 8395
pumps dlr tank I1V 1ng t97 4 New Moon Mob1le
675 4464
quar ters Oak Htll area
Home Ca ll.C46 9159
614 682 7813
Needed baby s1tter out Rt Ca ll
Ul
t1me 7 OOPM to reasonable
6
Lost and Found
New 1981 6&amp;.14 3 bdr , 2
11 30PM one illtle g.rl 2
baths electnc, turn , gar
yr
old
5
to
6
days
a
week
,
FOUND Red Bone Hound
den tub, bay wtndow,
525 per wk Cal\446 1081
Descnbe when call 992
FHA VA Convent1al Home St3 950 Several used total
3666
Loans
Columbus Farst e lectm 12 1979 W msor' s
Full t1me Program Coor Mortgiige
Co 463 Second 70x141 1973 Bachelor Pen
dtnator to work w•th per Ave Gallipolis
1
Yard Sale
!house 70x 12 w•th Roman
Oh 446
sons hand rcapped w1th
tub 2 preowned double
7172
Yard Sale Tue &amp; Wed
mental retardatiOn tn a
w•de 2 &amp; 3 bdr Kanauga
Howard Childers res1den
group home tn Btdwell,
Moble
Home
Sa les,
ce Kootnz Sat lor Rd , Vtn
Professtonal
Oh1o A soctal serv1ces 23
Kanauga Oh Call446 9662
ton OH Dashes anttque related degree IS requ.red
Serv1ces
drop leaf table. stero
applecant must
be COMMERCIAL and 1n
Must sell 14x70, • 3bdr
Home lntenor decorations
Qualified Mental Retar dustrral
photography
mobile home on acre, new
clothes
1ewe1rv. coffee dat1on
Profess•onal Phone 446 29011 or 446 7226 dril led well S\1,000 Col\
table &amp; ends tables, fish (QMRPI or QMRP
4.46 09~ Davts R.d •
aquareum and masc atems
ehQtble, expertence w1th after 4 p m
Proceeds lor Gallia persons Wtth mental retar
Chrtst1an School Bldgs datton 1S prefe.rred Send P1ano tuneng and repatr
t-4)(70 mob1le home wrth ttp
fund
resume to Carol Ba1sden. Love your ne1ghbor ttJne out 3 bdr central air
pnced on 1n spectron Call
P 0 Box 60.t, Jackson OH your Puma Btll Ward
Huge Yard Sale at home ot 45640 Buckeye CommuOI!y wards Keyboard 4-46 .t372. 446 2544 before I PM
Phyllis Mulholand In Servtces Is an equal op Galltpolrs
portuntty employer
W•l~esvllle Oh Good used
1973 Crown Haven, 14)(65,
clothing , bedding, toys and
GALLIA Cleaning and three bedroom, new car
anllques
9 s.
July $185 00 to $500 weekly do1ng Rent A Matd Service Inc, pet 1971 Cameron 14xl&gt;l,
22,23,&amp;24
mael•no work
No ex Free Estrmates bonded, two bedroom. new carpet
.nsured phone 245 9234
1972 Chomp•on, 12•60, two
perience requ1red
AP
bedroom, new carpet 1976
PLY Circle Sales, P 0 Clean.ng by the week, mon
L.arge Yard Sale Fur
Cameron,
12x60, •' two
Box 22.t D, RIChmond H11\ , thor contractual
nlture. c lothing, and m1sc
bedrooms bath &amp; 112. new
Thurs 23 a. Fri 24 9 hi\ 5
NY I 1418
1.:.;;;;;;;,:;;:;-;;:;;;:~;;-;~~
2233 Chestnut St
Auction Servtce carpet 1970 PMC, 12x60,
two bedroom. new carpet,
reductton close outs
GET VALUABLE tra~n.ng
B &amp; s sates, Inc , 2nd and
estates
farm
equipment
II
as a young buSiness person
V1and Street, PI Plea$ant,
and •arn good money plus vestock real estat~t L•cen WV
Phone 675 4424
'1
some great gifts as a Sen sed and bonded In Ohio,
and
West
WV
Bud
McGhee
tine! route carrier Phone
right away and get on Auction and Real Estate 1980 Ux7o Mobile Home 3
Yaro Sale Hobson Or, us
Co Call for terms 446 0552 bedrooms, extra roo'l\ilwith
L.ower end of Middleport the eligibility list at 992 or 446 0818 U8 Second wood
burner, sitting bn 2
2156orm
2157
Wed , Thurs a. F rl variety
Ave, Gallipolis. OH , 45631
acres Good building\ Site
of Items.
tor home $2-f,OOO 61-4 985
Oppor1unltv is vours 1ust
4395
ROBERTS
CON
Point for the asking Ask your STRUCTION CO Inc, Out
3305 Franktln,
Beeline stylist and she will
Wed
Pluunt
trademark
Quality a. 12x60 Buddy, 3 bedroom,
nesdav, Thursdav
and be happy to helP you loin Satisfact•on
We have furnished, centnl t olr;;·
th~
Beeline
world
of
Friday, 9 4
washer dryer, awnlng,r un ~
fashion and success Phone references Phone 256 1560
3941 between the hours
derplnnlng Set1,up Ill COUll'
I Uiiday·we,nesaay 'nur 992
sday, 9 ? Bedsproada, of9-6
'is:'lllilM:oblle
Hom• Perk!&lt;
Your Plano rusting in sum 1,.
992 7479
Draperies, uniforms,
mer Humidity? Free In
miscellaneous items 9 SEMI Invalid needs help spectlon with tuning Lane
Walnut Street.
Point three • day a ~r week. o.n1e11 742 2951 or 992
PtHMnl
s'taggard 304 773-5897
2012
1

·.

1------------l

Trash Ptckup In
The Vtllage ol
Mtddleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-5016
or 992 7505
4 17 ttc

ew~ , h&lt;',. \

1

-

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

Pomeroy, OH
992 2174

''

.......
...
... ..

7 15 I mo pd

H. L WHITESEL

" A

~
·~
~~~~~~~:~
)ln. OHmrn.
•
•·-.. '1~!-~Z~~~~!~~~~:
~

Vtnyl &amp; Alum mum
SIDING

SYRACUSE

41-MOOUt Homn

2 1-lultfttUt

t_...,.,, ••r s•1•
I2-MobUe
Hem•s

Free Esttmates
Call Collect
Ph 84l-ll22
7 13 2 mo pd

1 room

eSERVICES

and
were Emnw
served by

f

ce .,,.,,

11- WtlltM To Do

\9
:1fl

21 ,

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

t-wanttd to Buv

I For Sale
l Announcement
I For Rent •

14

or Wrtte Datly Sentinel Classtfled Dept.
111 Court St., Pomerov. 0., 45769

7-YardS..It!
t - P11bhc S.le
&amp; Authon

17
18

7

PHONE 992·2156

T--Happy Ach
6-Lo~t and Favnd

1wanr~

111

of

EUGEWE LONG

E

WANT AD INFORMATION

Wnte your own lid and order by matt wrth fh1~
coupon cance l your ad by pnone when you get
results Money not refundable

or

Psalm

Ann

thasmeeti~

Nottce
- -PubliC
--- ---

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
E~TATE
OF STEPHEN
EUGENE
SMITH
C .lSC No 23465
DECEASED
NOTICE OF
Case No 1J480
APPOINTMENT
NOTICE OF
OF FIDUCIARY
APPOINTMENT
On July 14 1981 '" the
OF FIDUCIA-RY
Me1gs County Probat e
On Ju!y 8, 1981 m the
Court Case No 13465 Me1gs County Probate
Ed 1son Hobstetter Ltncoln Court Case No 23480
Hill Pomeroy Ohto was Rebecca J Sm1t h 39-411
appo1nted
Adm•mstrator Sm rth Road
Pomeroy
Wtth the Will An n exed of Oh10 .tl$709 was appo rnted
the esl atc of Evelyn J Hear
Admm1strator of the estate
tlcy deceased lilte of 111 of Stephen Euge ne Sm rfh
Un1on Avenue Pomeroy deceased late of 39421
Oh1 0
Sm1 th Road
Pomeroy
Robe rt E Buck Oh10 4S7b9
Proba1e Judge/
s Rober IE Buck
Clerk
Probate J udge/
( 7) 2 I 28 181 4 31c
Clerk
C7J 14 21 28 3tc

E1ght members and one guest attended the Ruth M1ss1onary Ctrcle or
the Ractne BaptiSt Church held
recently at the home of Mar10r1e
Grunm
A readtng The Beauty Box" was
gtven by Mary K Yost Martha Lou
Beegle reported that g1fts from Ruth
C~rcle and Bertha M Sayre Soctety
had been presented to Enuna
Adams who ts a surgtcal pat1ent at a
hospttal
The C1rcle rece1ved a letter of
thanks for qutlt blocks whtch were
sent oversea$ The thank you was
read by Nondus Hendricks
Mrs Beegle also read a letter
£rom Mrs Wtlda Allison, president
of Women o£ Ohto A ptcmc was plan·
ned lor July 23, at the Partsh of the
Hills The Ruth Circle and the Bertha M Sayre SOCiety w11l meet agam
tn August at the church
The program was presented by
Grnet Ervme Nondus Hendr1cks
opened the program wtth prayer
Scnpture was the reading the 24th

th l'r l lt l ,l:&lt; l ltllllt t' '&gt;~t r ll i!lhl ld •ll
11 IlL" r uu ... lllt "~ dr ... u....... l llll lU! Ittl tht Oi lf\
S llt t p l&lt;ik t ' llli ll&lt;lh • •f• ttl lt 11:1' 111\llt fm
J\ k, u , t'1 if urt nltrln~; lhln ~ hm tn hv.tn "'r
1 I ll\ M&lt;1r ~ .1 n I Piirktr mtl I ht dub t1 J' H tl
... flbdl ' r rt rt&lt;tl n Tht rrn t r 1ut n~" !l bt
ht!d n Juh 'I al Dum ( •l\1t! " lwmt Al l h tl
111tt1 Ult.: t lu!J rm rrrbo. rs 1\i\1 tur n 111 11 1111\ 1
llt l lt tl fur l~l n :nn Sl'.!tp ~ Lakt ~
Ka1h 1
I

-~ - --

Ruth Circle Addreu.
Nam•----------_________________
meets

4-H news .. ·------.,..Tht \lm '

-

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY OHIO
ESTATEOFEVELYNJ
HARTLEY DECEASE 0

I

MetgS Local Board
Educat1on
soutn Therd Avenue
Mtddleport Oh1o 45760

tnstalled as county director A tour

was made Durmg the program Mrs.
Ruth Powers, Mtddleport Libranan,
showed a ftlm ' Chrysanthemwns m
Japan " Mrs Lillian Moore will serve as hostess at the Aug 12 meeting
A covered dish dinner will precede
the meeltng Re£re8hments were
served by Mrs Blakeslee and Mrs.
Lohse wtth Mrs Blakeslee presentmg those attendmg wtth an Afncan
VIOlet
Guests were Margaret J Butcher,
Ciance Ervm, and Maxtne Coats
Gasktll

~=:::;;;;;:;;::::;;::=:;-r::=========~rr=:=:::~~;::==~

VINYL
PRODUCJS

Veh• cles Old Bus
Shells
P• c k up Truck
Shells and Van
Bus Garage
Rutland, Oh •o45775
10 30 • m Augu517 1981
The P.em&gt;Ses w1ll be open
for •nspectton by Interested
part•es on Wednesday.
~'!.Sut\~ 1981 I rom 1 00 to
Addlttonal tnformatton
may Pe obta1ned from the
Supenntendent s Off tee tn
Middleport OhtO

. ......
.... ...,.
..............

- .'

Business Services

~313
prov41
tsrons
pi the Rev•sed
of
sectron
Code j
of Ohio, not•ce •s hereby 1
grven that the Board of
Educatton of the Me1gs
Local School D1stnct will
offer tor sale at Public Auc
tton at the locatron date,
and ttme l1sted below the
follow•~ Real Estate and
S•d•ng
Old Veh1cies
R0011ng I Gutter
Old Church Property
Pearl Street
Remodeling
M1dt1leport Oh1o 45760
Serv1ng Your Area for
10 00 AM August 7 1981
20 Years

or the flower and vegetable garden

or

PubliC NOtiCe

HONORED ON BIRTHDAYCh1p Macomber. son of Mr and
Mrs R1 ck Macomber &lt;-elebrated
hiS second btrthday at the home
of hiS parents recently A circus
theme "as carried out Those at·
tendmg \\ rre Mr and Mrs R1ck
Berkley, Mr and Mrs James
Dyer Mr and Mrs Mtchael Clair
and Danny, Melva Eblm B1ll and
Ktm. Soany Ntcholson, Wade
Ntrhoison Mr and Mrs Don
Macomber. Mr and Mrs Ralph
Macomber Mr and Mrs Henr)
Mtllam and Susan and Bonwe
Rtfe Sending presents were Mrs
Btrdte Johnston, Bowta Johnston
and Ntcky. Mr and Mrs Eug.ene
Johnston and Ketth and Bertha
Rile

Mrs
Elame Stafford, Loretta,
Larry, Penny . and Dave, Jerry
Laverack, Mr and Mrs Eugene
Wtthee, Mathew and Kevtn, Rtb
Grande, Mr and Mrs Robert Marcmko and Mana, Tuppers Platns,
Margaret Eskew, Lort Faulkner,
Mr and Mrs Robert Gorgensen and
chtldren, and Mr
and Mrs
Dawayne Eskew and Mark, Dayton

linsvtlle: Mr and Mrs' Roger Karr,
Jessica and Valerie, Chester, Mr
and Mrs Charles Eskew, Mr and
Mrs Jerrv F1elds and Terry, Mr
and Mrs Davtd Esktw, Kandt, Beth
and Amy, Newark, Mr and Mrs
Charles Pauley, Charleston, W Va :
Mr and Mrs Raymond Hatlteld,
Rutland
Mr and Mrs Charles Wtthee

Daisy Blakeslee hosts garden club

P1goll teumun-- - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - -- - - - - - - POMEROY - The first P igott
reum on " as he ld recently at Forked
Run State Park w1th 69 descendants
of Dexter E P1gott and Roseanna
Coffman attendmg
Local descendants attending were
Mr and Mrs Rex Batley, Bnan
Batley, Ann Swrunerfteld, Bett~e
Pigott, Mr and Mrs Henry Bahr,
Howard J1m and Randy Bahr, Mr
a nd Mrs Richard F1ck Jr , Kevm
a nd Klfk Ftck, Tamm1 Barber.
Jesstca Barber Jeanne Baker,
Jeremy Blake Matthew Baker Sma
Murphy Am y and Tracy Murph)

nm

Evans,

and Mrs Roland Carpenter, Wendy,
Jody. Tunmy and Cratg of Belpre
Linda, Pam Usa and Chrts Frazter
and Am} Householder
Coolvtlle
Mr and Mrs John C Hensley
Charles, Paul and Matt of Tuppers
P iams , Mr and Mrs Davtd De
LaCruz and Justm of Reedsvtlle
R1chard and Bnan Liter, Perry Car
penter, Mr and Mrs Roger Car·
penter, Roger, Jr , Donald, Gratg
and John, D1ana Evans Mark
Moore, George 0 Hensley, Penny,
Candy and Juruny Hensle}, Mr and
Mrs Henry Hensley Romte and Sis,
Mr and Mrs John J Evans, Rebec·
ca and Stephante, Mr and Mrs John
P Hensley and Dtck, Mae McPeek
and Leona Hensley, all or Long Bot
torn

or

Meter, Randy, Diane, Sally Jo, and
Jack, Route S, Marietta; Melvin R.
Van Meter, Jr., Pomeroy; Don and
Brewer, Reedsville; Alberta
Van Meter, Columbus; Jill, J J and
Melody Lawrence, Portland;
James, Barbara, Jetmifer and J118011
Lawrence, Syracuse: Millard and
vera Van Meter, Pomeroy; F~
Van Meter, Ractne

with the mOit children present
Attentlq were Ada and Richard
Van
Meter, Beverly, Esther Dalley,
Park
Elison
Dalley, Joe and B~ JohnPrizes were presented to Estet;,
sOn,
Mike
and Chuck
Alicta,
&gt;Dailey,theoldestattendlng, Melody
Cindy,
Ryan
and
Matt
Evans,
Laura
Lawrence, the youngest, Alberta
Ohllnger,
Ada
and
MissY
Van
Meter,
Van Meter, the one traveling the farthest, and Mr and Mrs Michael Iva and Clarence Lawrence, all of
Portland
Evans and Mr. and Mrs. Richard D
Mr and Mrs. Rtchard 0 Van
Van Meter, Marietta, the fanrulies

PORTLAND - The Van Meter
reunion was held Sunday at Portland

Hensley reunton-- - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - The a nnua l reumon of the descenda nts of the late Mr and Mrs H A
He nsley was he ld a t the Portland
State Pa rk July 12 Hostesses were
Leona Hensie) and Mae Mc Peek A
dtme r "as en]Oved by the 78 m a t
tenda nce a lter the blessmg by Mae
Mc P eek
The oldest present wa s George 0
Hensley a nd the youngest. his great
granddaughter Stephanie E vahs
two weeks old
A short memonal s er\o tee was con
dueled by Leona and Mae lor the two
s1sters, lost thts ) Car - Iva Car
penler m Februarv a nd Anna Ltter
m Apni
The a fternoon was s pent m takmg
a nd v1ewmg pi ctu res piavmg games

Public NQtlce
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
In accordance w•th the

GET

AREIIIIOI

~~··

�/

Ohio

Pomeroy-Mid~~ep_C!!"t,

Sentinel

32

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

1971 Darian 12 x 65 , 3
bedrooms . 1972 Crown
Haven, 14 x 65 with 8 x 10
expando, 3 ~drooms . 1973
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 ~drooms.
1972 Invader u x 70, 3
~drooms . 1972 Nashau. u

x 60. 2 bedrooms. B

1;•

S1

Mobite Homes
tor Rent

42

LAYNE ' S FUR NITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker , 01toman, 3 tables. S.SOO. Sofll,
chair and toveseal, $275.
Sofas and chairs priced
from $275. Ia $695 . Tables.
$38 and up to $109. Hide-a~ds,$340 . , queen soze, SlBO.
Recliners , $165 ., S295 ,
Lamps from $18 to $65 . 5
pc . dinettes from $79 ., to
$365. 7 pc .• $189. and up.
Wood table and 4 c hairs,
$350 up to $495 . Hutches.
$300 and S37S , maple or
pine fln tsh . Bedroom suttes
Bassett Oak , $649 .•
Bassett cnerry , $765 . Bunk
bed complete with mattresses, $250 . and up to
$350 Captain' s beds . $27'5.
complete. Baby beds, $89.
Matt resses or box springs,
fu ll or tw1n, SSS , firm, $65
and $75 Queen sets, S185 5
dr ches t s, 549 -4 dr chests,
$42 Bed frames, S20 and
S25., 10 guri Gun cab1nets,
$350 , di nette chairs S20
and S25 Ta ppan gas or
electrtc ranges. $285 .
USED
Ranges ,
refrtgerators, and TV ' s,
3 m tles out Bu tavtlte Rd
Open 9am to 7pm , Man
t hru Frr , 9am 10 5pm , Sat
446 0322

Two bedroom hoose Trailer
on Ashton -Upland Road .
SlSO plus utilities and

damage depesit. 3 miles
from Rl 2 675·4088 .
Two

2

bedroom

house

S trailers tor rent, furni shed,

Sales, Inc . 2nd and Viand
Sts
Pt. Pleasant. WV .
Phone 615 ·«24

I with central air, gOOd for
work1ng couple or couple
w ith 1 chi ld . S150 per month
plus deposot 675-4088

Trailer for sa le or rent,
partly furnished , Gatlipol ts
Ferry PhoneJOH751867 .

67

12x60

mobile

home

2 bedroom mob 1le home in
New Haven. adults only . no
pets . Phone 304675·1452 or
675· 2996

Phone 675· 4898

1967 Trad er for sale Phone

2 bedroom mobile home tor
rent Phone 304·675 3885

304 675 -4898.

2 bedroom mobile home
10x45 $1400 Phone 304 675
1&lt;52 or 67 5 2996
Nasht 2 bedroom trail er,
pr tced on tnspect •on, good
cond tt ton Phone 30.4 675
6273 or 675 3«2 .
1971 Brookwood, bath and
half . has been remodeled,
wall
t o wa l l ca r
pettng ,unfurnished Phone
675 1553
Farms lor Sale
----

ll

55 ac res, ntne roo m house,
barn . minera ls. secluded ,
gOOd hunttng Morntng Star
area
$65.000 Add•tional
101 acres ava il able 949
2630
3~ __ Lots~- Acr eage

LOTS Real nice campsite
on Rac coon Creek, all
uttltttes avai lable, $300
down , owner wtll ftnance ,
ca II after 3 p m , 256-6413 .
2 acres on Floyd Cla rk Rd
close t o Rt . 160, s.t,ooo.
Phone 446 0390
Green Beans P1ck your
own 56 00 bu
Raynor
Peach Orchard, 5 miles
below Ga ll 1po1ts on Rt 7
Ca ll 4.46-4807

------1 plus acre lot on FlatwOOd
Rd , all wooded Ca ll 9&lt;/2
5396 after 5
10 acres near Porter on old
tdea l for home or home
Road lrontage
s1t es
assum ab le mort , low 1n
tE&gt;rest Ca ii 3BB 9060
160 ,

Roughly 1'11 acr e, S R 684 ,
Har rt so n v 1lle
Ask 1ng
53,500 742 2577
Lots for sale &amp; 2 new sub
dtV 1S10ns tn Ra cme Vtllage
On Vine 51 &amp; Yellow Bush
Rd 949 2340
BY owner . J apa rtment
house on approx I acre
L1ve 10 one. rent other s to
make your payment Can
be converted smgle home
C1ty water , wil l cons 1der
lan d con tr act 675 1883 9 5
pm
145 ACRE S 412 378 1804

Rentals
41 - ~-HOuses for Rent
-~

- --

- --

3 bdr house $250 Re t er en
ces . sec
dep , Rod ney
Vd h age 11 Call 446 "-416 at
ter 7PM

5 rm house on Chdlt cothe
Rd Pnone 446 3437
For r en t 2 bdr house tn
Cen t enary ref and secunty
dep r eq Ca ll «6 4053

J r oom fu r ntshed co ttage ,
uttl tf 1es lurn 1shed , adults,
no pets . Phone 30A 675 28 12
or 304 675 1580
TWO bedroom house 304
675· 1371 or 675·3812

•

Two story house, electn c
heat pump, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths. f amily room , Hot
point kitchen, refrigerator ,
stove
and
dis h washer carpeted, drapes,
no i nside pets. nearly one
acre with 200 fl . frontage ,
close Kaiser $450 month or
util ities pa•d S600 month
plus security deposrt and
lease Can be purchased at
end of lease using rent as
partial down payment.
R.L.Handlev 304·273 2021
42

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

1 bedroom mobile home,
marrted couple only . No
pets S150 per month Phone
304·675 4154 .

Two mobtle home lots for
rent, married couples apply in person to Everette
Schwartz , R t I. locust
Road , Point Pleasant
Two mobtle home lots tor
rent, marned couples ap
pl y m person to Everette
Schwart z, Rt
I. Locust
Road, Po•nt Pleasant
OR REN T almostnew14 x
70, 3 bedroom , 1 1• 2 baths ,
sitttng on ntce lot, ready to
move into Phone 304· 576 27 11
Apartment
for R-,
e.,
nt. __ _

44

2 bdr . apa rtm en t lg . L R
and Kttchen Across from
H onda Shop no pets Call
446 3937
Second fl oor ftnt shed ef
f tc tency apt
Furntshed,
adults only , no pets . 729 2nd
Ave GalltpoiiS Ca ll 446
0957
4 rent unfurn apt all c ar
peted , $250 mo SlOO dep,
utt1it 1es patd , no child re n,
no pets Ca II 446 3437
For re nt new I bdr

apt

53
A T TENTION
(IM
PDRTANT TD YOUI Wo l l
pay cash or certit 1ed check
for anftQues and coll ec ·
ttbl es or en ttr e estates.
N othtng too large . Also,
guns, pocke t watches. and
co1n co ll ect tons Call 557
34 11
S4
-

Mosl anythmg used 1n
Restaurant and
store
equipment
RADCD 304
523 -1378, Huntrngton
Spec1a l Sale 1 Satell1te An
tenna , BUY dtrec t from
manfacturer,
180
TV
staloons Call602 622 2290

FEVER ' HDME
Ca ll «6 0390
remedy , trad1t ion tor cen
tur1 es, 1f works For com
REGENCY APT INC 2 p lete 1nfo and recetpt send
b e droom ,
kit
today sell addressed stamchenf urn 1shed, carpet ed , ped envelope plus $1 00 to
b tll s parttally pa1d S200 S R A Co , P D. Box 284,
mo
Exce ll e nt
ne 1gh Ga ll1 pohs, OH 4563 1
bor hood. 675·67'12 Dr" 675
-·--·
·-5104
Burrough's
L6000
Programmabl e Accou nttng
Fur n1 shed eff tc1ency apt Mach1ne Good cond Ca ll
S135 ut tli t1es pd , share 16141446 2342
ba f h, SUitab le tor one Call
446 4416 after 7PM
WOOD BURNIN G add·on
f urnance lor gas oi I or elec
Furntshed
Apt
$220 . tr1c, and al so works on hot
utt11f1 eS patd, adults, I bdr , water heat Still in factory
n1ce Ca ll 446 4416 after carton
Wou ld normally
7PM
cost around 51000, will se ll
tor $400 Call6 14·256 1216
NI CE
U NFURNISHE D
Apt . S200 mo. pl us you pa y Lowes t prtces on Bemco
utrltt1es Ad ulTs only , no beddmg tn the area Ca ll
pets Ava tlabl e Aug l, 446 tor pr tces V tlltage Fur ·
8067
ntture. 2605 Jackson Ave,

- ----

675 l773

10 cubtC tt
c: hes ttype
I bedroo m apts available freezer less than 1 yr old
a t Riverside Apts Equa l Ca ll 446 0230
Qppor tun1t y Hous1 ng Call
992 772 1
A TTENTIDN Buy dorecl
- - ~ ------.-- from fa ctory outl et New
Apar tm en t for r en t Ca ll IIYtng ro om furntfure,
992 5908
upholstered sofa s, chairs,
- - - - - - - - - loveseats and htdeabeds
One bed r oom , unfurn1shed , Oak f rames , cu stom made
al l elect r 1c 992 2094
Cho tce at stze, f abrtc &amp;
______ ~-- sty l£1 Low , low prices on
tabrrc In stoc k. Good pr1c es
APARTME NT S
AN D on reupholstery R&amp;M Fur
MOBILE HOME S67S 4130
n 1ture Manufac tunng, St
Rt 7, Crown City, Ohio.
Apa rtm pnfs 675 5548
256 1470 Hou rs Man thru
~- ___ _ _ __
Fr1day 7 30 4 00, Tues
7
30 8·00, Sat 1·00·5 DO
SMALL furniShed apart
ment , no pets, r efer ences
r equi red , 304 675 1365
6x 10 metal shea r etn torced
by 2x4' s. on 4x4 foundat1on
For r en t 1n Mtdd lepor f , 2 floored . Eas ily m oved .
bedroom t urntshed apart 1200 Ca ll 446 0230
m ent Ca ll 1 304 882 -2566
AMF 10 speed men' s b tke
BED ROOM turn 1shed Only a tew months old , $85
apartment, uttl 1t1es patd, Call446 0562
304 675·1897.
For sal e girls cloth1ng stze~
Call 10
l , 2 &amp; 3 bedroom apart- 6 14, ltke new
m ents now ava il able at Pt. eventng lifter 5 30 245 5634
Pleasant Inn
Also a
honeymoon suo1e .
Al l SW 1MM IN G
POOLS
util1ties paid Apartments PRE - SEA SO N SALE .
as tow as $140 . a week. 599900 IN STA LLED! !!
Honeymoon sutte S45 a Above ground pool COM
no ght Call304·6756276 .
PLETE LY INSTALLED
starting at S999 00 Price tn
eludes pool, deck , fence,
45
Furn1shea Rooms
ftlter, ltner , and 1n
SLEEPIN G RODMS and stallation under normal
light housekeeping apt • ground conditton . Free
Park Central Hotel.
shop at home servtee Call
1 800·624·8511
Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOB I LE Home
Park . Rout e 33, North of
Pomeroy . L arge lots. Call I
992·7479
~

TRAILER space 3 miles
from town junct ton 2 &amp; 62 at
old Y, Pt Pleasant. 675-

2 bdr. trailer turn. gas and
water turn ., $225 . per mo ..
$100 dep., no pels. Call 446·
4745.

47

,...

. . . ...&gt; ·-- :-.
/ '\ ,...,.

- ,,

N i; ;,.;rl&amp;:; :..' ::.•
C'..1:_·.' ...ft : r

3248 .
wan led to Rent

'V

..... "" ... ..... ..
.........
'

992·5858 .
51

'

''

1980 Honda NC 50 express,
$350. Phone «6-7747 afler
5PM .
1973 Honda 350. GOOd cond .
949 2535 afler 5:00.

7800 BTU atr coAd , new
Ca l l843·2414

t

Clean . good cond , neutr al
co lor daveport wtth or
withou1 new covers Ca ll
949 2271
Good Thtngs To Eat
Yellow Freestong canni ng
peaches. Now thru Sept 20
any Quant tty availab le.
Re tat l &amp; Mason,
wholesale
Market,
W.VaBob's
. Ph .
713 -572 1 Open Da il y ttll 9
p_m

•
t
.t.. l

e ... .,. .... ""'

26' TROUTWDOD travel
rr a tl er and camp stte on
Raccon Creek Close to
Ohio River
$500 down
Owner w tl l t 1nance 614-256·
1216
NEEDseveralttemsoffur
nttu re,
appt1ances,
televisions B tg discou nts
tor quantty pur c h ase
Village Furn1ture 2605
Jackson Ave 675 -1773.
B 1G dtscounts tor cash and
carry at Vil lage Fur nttu r e
2605 J ackson Ave nue , 675
1773
18,000 BTU air conditioner.
exce llent conditton , $300
Phone 304·675 2820.
Roper 8 hp rotary mower tn
good work 1ng condition.
Phone 304 675 6174 or 675
2194
H o tpotnt
no
fr os t
ref ngera tor, one Yahama
Chappy Phone675· 1553 .

s8

HousehoiCI G-s

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES
washers,
dryers.
refrigerators,
ranges .
Skaggs
Ap ·
piianees, 1918 Eastern
Ave ., 446· 7398.
2 Twin maple beds, good
condition, Point Pleasant
304-675-2698.

Fruit

71

Frutts
&amp;
v egeta bl es
Homegrown-sweet corn,
ca bbage, mangos, etc.
Charles M cKean Farm .
catt446 9442
Homeg rown tomatoes, four
houses below Gallipol is
Ferry post office, roadside
stand .

s5

_ _..B~u~of"
d~
o n,gt:S:cu,_,p,_,p,_.l,_,
,e,_,sc._

Butldtng matertals, block,
brick, sewer pipes, win dows, l tntels, etc . Claude
Winters , Rio Grande, 0
Cat t245·5121

56

Pets for Sate

PDDDLE GROOMING
Ca ll Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.
DRAGONWYND
CAT
TE RY
KE NNEL , AKC
C how
puppies .
CFA
Himal aya n, Persta n and
Stamese k tttens. Cal l 4463844 after o4 p.m

BR IARPAT CH KENNELS
Boardtng and groomt ng
A K C Gordon se tt er s,
Eng li sh Cocker Span tels
Call446 4191

01

Farm Equipment

12HP, 2 wheel. Gravely, 40
1n
mower ,
26
tn.
culttivator Sears electric
week wacker 16 in . cut.
Sears drop spreader. All in
exc con d Ca II 446 -6575
Farma ll F20 trac tor, S350
Masste Harns w tfh front
end
l oa der ,$ 650 . In
ternational 18 ft . fla1bed
1966,$900. Phone 256·9303
For Sal£~ a 1200 bushel! wire
cor n cnb . Ca ll 388 ·8564
For Sale Ford 3 pt . disc and
mowmg m achtne for Svper
A Phone 256 1354.
Fou r IS ,OOO gallon tanks
located above ground at
Athens, Ohoo . $3,000.00
each Phone 1-304-422 2781
1 good Case bailer and
wa gon $2 ,500. 1 la rge pony
(52 in) bay with black
matne and tail , wh tte
stock i ng legs SJOO 9853891.
Farma ll cub tractor Wtfh
cvltivators. Has new clut
ch, pressure plate, throw
ovt beartng , transm tssion
over hauled , magenta
overhaul ed, new starter,
new
battery ,
battery
cabl es. new vo ltage relay,
ru ns good 247 2092
GRAVE LY
tra c tor , L
model. electnc start. with
mower , rota t iller , dual
wheels, 5800. Phone 304 ·675·
4828 .
GRAVE LY tra c tor with
mower Phone 304 458 1880.

AKC Cocker Spaniel pup
ptes 6 wks old SlOO Ca ll
256 1361

SYCLE bar mower, duel
wheels for old and new
model Gravely Tra ctors.
Phone 304·895 3974 .

M1nature Pood les, 2 male,
2 f emal es, 9 wks old For
more inlo ca /188 2 3956

JO HN Deere bulldozer with
heavy duty tr at ler . Phone
304 675 2088 or 675 4560 .

ACF Reg1stered Wh 1te and
sh aded Sti ver Per sian and
seal ptont Htmalayans
Caii304-Sll 7749

62

Beaut1fu l INK C Reg Peke
a Poo puppt eS and AKC
Reg Pektngese pupptes
PhOne 446·0857

AKC Reg1stered brown
poodle pup 3 months old
DH L, Parvo&amp; Rabies shots
good to 1 yea r old SISO 992·
7102
THE F I SH TANK and Pet
Shop. 2101 Jefferson Ave
675·2063, Pt Pleasant . New
hours Now open on Wed
Open 11 -4 Man mru sat.
Fr t hoursl16
AKC
Da c hsh und ,
Pomeran1an an
Pood le
pups 895· 3958

Sl

---~a~te&lt;!_!o Buy __

St and rng t1mber, 10 acres
or m ore P hone 61463&lt;4
2289
63

livestock

Pony stud ser\lice For ap-

2 HOI5te tn Herft-er art1f1ca l
s1re by 9H143 9H164,due in
August $1 ,000 ca ll882·2662
2 mtlk goats, $60 each or
both for S100 Freshened
June Shade, Ohoo (6141
696·1234
2 kiJ goats . S weeks old,
mal es . $25 . each . 112
Nu b1an Shade, Ohio 614696 1234
6 week old roosters for sale.
15 cents each. 949· 2502

500·550 lbS. 992 ·7458 .

key board, like new , $900
304·882·2476.

8 900 lb . grain fed heifer,

::I ·-

'&lt;

1

'v, I , ...

#IJ. ,
• I ,.

~ -';!&gt;

~

'

:

'
I
I

,\,_)(...: -;
~

'Tl.I O:

·'
;:·' i~ -·

...

sell live wetght.t the farm
w. A . Barker . Phone 30.4·
675-2697.

~ -~

Hay &amp; Grain

64

Hay For Sale 1500 to 1800
bales. Phone 245·5005.
Laroe clean bales of straw,
$1 .5 0 ,
675 ·5 180 .
'

7/ME -· ·!VQW
/JIVE AN

.EAR 70
7HEM ·

71

'~

Autos lor

'

"

s.-,,.- -

1978 CAMARO, silver wllh
black Interior, 305 cu. In,
PS, AC, in-dash tape.
Call 446·8049 alter
3: 30.

u.ooo.

~.,g,

~l MCtl Sl H!.ILTl

1512 S .Millf ST
~EEN

SAY
WIS.C •

1975 Ford Mavrick 2 dr , 6
cyl , auto, good OliS
mtleage , 32,500 m11es,
almos1 new ttres, exc .
cond . Call 446·2235
1976 Cadillas DeVtlle. low
mileage, ex cond .• 4 new
rad1als , no rust, $3,795 . Call
446·4525
Fer sale 1964 Ford pickup
truck, 1968 Buick Sky lark,
and 1970 Buick Skylark .
Phone 446 · 468&lt; .
Burgandv Monte Carlo
Landau , 1976, loaded wilh
a or. Call247·241l .
1969 Dodge Dar1 GTS,
ask ing51.300 Call949 2123.
1978 CUTLASS Salon . 675·
2722 or 675·5571
MORRI SO N 'S Auto sa les
Henderson , wv Phone 675·
1574 or 675 ·288 1
1980 200SX Datsun, ex cellent cond1t1on, loaded,
$6,100 00 Call 304 675 ·5090
1975 Gold Ouster , exce llent
condtflon, ortgtnal patnt,
radial t ires, new brakes
and shocks, complete lv
tuned up and front end
aligned, 21 mpg, aluminum
rims inc ludedS1,900 Phone
304 675 1842 alters.

75 Troumph TR7 4 speed
52300. Phone 304 773·5351.
1972 Volkswagen A 1 con
ditton Phone 304 675·3476

CONTINIOUS no leak gut:
tering, custom made tor
your home . For free
estimates, call ADVANCE
SEAMLESS GUTTER
AND DOOR . 614 698·8205 .

Boatsand
Motors for Sale

70 Model 18 ft . Runabout
wilh ! ra iler, 65 H .P. Mer·
cury Motor . Misc .Equipment, excellent condition
$1200. Call 675·3383 afler
8: 00P .M .
12 toot Sears fiberglass Ted
Williams bass boat and tilt
trailer . $400. See al 5 Bur·
dette Addition.

1969 FORO L TO, auto., 429
eng., 62,000 actual miles.
PS, PB, air . RUf'\S g - , one
owner. Call388·9996.
77 Trans AM many options
price reduced lo 13,600,
Call ~- 1136.

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Auto parts, auto repair ,
wrecker
service,
buy
automobi les, rad iators and
balleroes. «6-7717 .

77'

Auto Repair

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE . 24 hr wrecker
service . "Big or small" we
tow them all! 2332 Eastern
Ave ., Gallipolis, Ohio. Day
- «6·2445 or Nigh! · 446 4792 .

------- -

Auto Pa1nt1ng &amp; Sandtng
$175, any color,fr ee pickup
&amp; delivery tn Gallipolis
a rea , Hammond Body
Shop, 221 Mtll St 379 ·2782.
E &amp; v Body Shop Wan!
your car looking new? Call
446 9304 Georges Creek Rd

73 Dodge dart sport black
on black cragers. new
tires. 340 automatic. Phone
304 675 1769.

1980 Prowler camper 17 ft .
full y self contatned, ex .
cond . Call 256-6626, Crown
Cily, DH.
1977 26 FT. TITAN motor
home, generator, air cond ,
awning, TV antenna , 6 11 .
1op carier , sleeps 6, 13,000
m oles. Call 367 7300 afler
5 30

69 YE L LOWSTDN E self·
contamed . Phone 304 -367 3427

ser Ires

1979 Jeep Cherokee Golden
Eagle, ps, air. rad to, tape,
excellent condition Phone
304 773·5323 .

____ _ ""C7_ __
81
Home
Improvements __ _

1981 Plymouth Champ,
7,000 miles, $4,800 Phone
615 ·6951.

FOR BEST In Carpet
Cleaning - Ca ll Smeltzer's
Steamway. Call 614·446·
2096.

1978 Chevroletb lourspeed ,
excell ent condition and gas
mi leage . 1·304 882 2915

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
446·4208

1971 Cadtllac, reasonabl e.
Phone 675 3901

J IM MARCUM Roofing ·
spouttng and Siding. 30
years experience
Free
esttmates . Remodeling .
Call 388·9857

1977 Olds Brougham , ex
cel lent c ond tfton Can be
seen at 2307 Mt Vernon
Avenue .

72 - -r ruciCsfor sale -

·

For Sale 1972 GMC 7500
Diesel dump lruck . Ca ll 1·
614·694·7842 .
75 Chevrolet 1/2 T. V 8,
auto.,
new tires . 75
Chevrolet 1 T. 12 fl . slake
bed tow milage . Call 446·
0322

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings, com·
mercial and residential,
free estimates Call 2561182
SANDERS
CON ·
TRACT fNG , Carpentry
work &amp; painting, concrete,
landscaping, 446·2787 .
CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Haffelt Brothers CuSiom
Carpets. Free estimates.
Call «6·2107.

1975 Ford 3/ 4 ton pickup
truck, automatic, PS, PB,
360 engine, air cond. Call
«6·2641. 8 ·5 ,

WOODSHOP · Cabinets,
picnic
tables,
porch
swings, most wOOd products. 101 Court Sl., Gallipolis .
Call 446·2572.

1975 Ford I ton llat~d
truck. good engine &amp;
8: 25x20 II res, body rough.
Call446·264'1. 8 5.

WEATHERALL
CON ·
CRETE - quality and ser·
vic~. call675: 1582.

78 Ford pickup, 74 GMC
Pickup, 60 Ford Pickup, 75
Cadillac, 76 Honda motorc ycle, fender &amp; door
Side tor 74 chevrolet.
«6-2821 .
1977 CHEV . '12 Pickup,
most all faGt~ry opllons
plus eJCtras. Real good
cond . Ph. 367·0107 or 446·
0648 after 5 p.m . .
73 DOdge Truck. 318englne.
Call388·9036. ·
1971 Ford , Dump , Truck.
GOOd cond. SJ,200. _ ~oy
'(Frankl Rlflle . ~-095,
1979 '12
Chevy plc~up.
wheel drllfe, lock out twbl.

tOn

i

$4,100. '"'·2190.
1971 lnternatiO..al pick up 4
s~, body lair condition,
engine i(ery,tjciod t~ltlon .'

$600. Pho!Je~·451· 192 • .

TE-RRIBL-e:!
OORS'T PIL-E

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or 446· 2454

OF .JUIJK
1'11£: ~1./ER
DRIV~t.Jl

Ser·

wv

F &amp; K Tree Trimming.
stump removal . 675·1331.

T
and
R
bu olding,
remodeling, also papering,
carpet installation, and
general
home
im provements. 675·5689, 675 ·

ANNIE

l(}(J() l,(}fCES

5304 .

-~~ : PROOF

To e~

'- :-'__,::-:---=-~.:~ -u\:

PAINTING · Interior and
exter i or ,
plumbing ,
roofing, some remodeling .
20 yrs. ••P- Caii388·1M52.
BING'S CONCRETE CON·
STRUCTION · Specializing
In concrete driveways,
sidewalks,
patio,
basement, garage floors
and·l!tc. Free estlmalesi 11
years experience . Call 3677191.

-

__

_

.:.__

_;___

Hoover Sweepers repaired
at Empire F~rnlture, 11-42
Secottd Av~, Gallipolis, OH .
Interior •nd E•~riOr R'fln tlngt tral!or roots, and dry
wall Sll end up, IS yra. ••·
perlence. F,...est. Call4461

1562,

,;;

I'"R)'' ;);{

COHFf()fNT/1/l
l ,~1C:N' T FlEW TrE,''t
MY5ELF 1 ET. NH:H

PE&gt;H, ctii'E~
! =tOTO-

Trr~::

,.,

e-::~

EXPERIENCED Mason,
Roofer, Carpenter, E lectrician, General repairs
and remodeling. Phone 304·
675·2088 or 675·4560.

A'l:

no ~ 0L

1

7·Ui,'~

..:1::~

~~~=~~ ?

~r:\· ~

J-1

61t~P:'E~

·

r u: \1,

'

Plumbing

81

_ ___,&amp;~H:.:ec=:aec
tie;
n,gc___ _
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fl&gt;urlh and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or «6·«77

D. C. Contractors Plumbing, electrical. heating,
roofing, aluminum, vinyl
Stdtng, and home painting .
675·3376 or 675·1240.

8l

Ellllcavating

DOZER WORK Compare
our RATES Phone 2561560.
Dozer work . Sma ll jobs a
specially . 742·2753
Oitcher work . Charles R:
Hatfield, Hatloeld Backhoe.
Gas, electric, and water :
742 2903.

lll

EOWARD' S Backhoe and
Dozer Service . Specializing
in septic lank . 675 ~ 1234 .

1970 Bui ck Skylark 350
automatic , runs · goOd,
would make good work ca r
5300 Phone 675·3423.

- - - - -----

m

J &amp;. P Plumbing &amp; Healing,
Rl . 1 Gallipolis. 367·7853.

camp1ng
Equipment

78

\\/AVE- A LOt-I~ GOODBYe.
MATE-Y, IT'LL !IE A WHILE
&amp;EFORE We '""" LAt-ID
AI7AIIJ ,

HARPER Halstead, lawn
mower repair and shar pening service, 10 a.m .-6
p.m. 675-5868.

COOK'S Television
vice.
Henderson ,
Phone675·2250.

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

1978 Fold down Camper
w1th awtng &amp; port-a-pot .
Ca ll446· 7230

2 year ling heiffers, 2 bulls,

Alpine Nanny goat
freshed in April the first
time. Call 304-895-3821 .

cu s; .

1966 Ford Fair lane good
cond Call 992·3743

potn tment phone 992 3904 .

Musical
Instruments
L owrey Organ doubl e

' J '~

1976 Kawasaki KZ 400, new
battery, 17,000 miles, S650.

CAPfAIN EASY

I

7:00 (]) e PM MAGAZINE
(])
JOHN ANKERBERG
SHOW
())@ . FAMILYFEUD
CD KNOWLEDGE: FIVE
MINUTES TO UVE
• ()) TIC TAC DOUGH
()) (j])
MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
!laJ NEWS
7:05 ()) ~LLINTHEFAMILV
7:30 (]) e BULLSEYE
(]) ANOTHER LIFE
QD
RACE FOR THE
PENNANT
()) . ()) JOKER'S WILD
CD HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
()) DICK CAVETT SHOW
!laJ
RICHARD SIMMONS
SHOW
® URBAN LEAGUE'S NA·
TIONAL CONVENTION 'Now
St ratag1ee for the Cha nging
Times' Thts yea r 's theme
e xami nea the co n aerY&amp; live
mood of the co unt ry and its
1m pa ct on Bla ck America, aa
well as Reag an's potictes on
eoctal
and
internattonal
iii8U81
G2i FACE THE MUSIC
7:35 (I) BASEBALL Ri c hmond
Braves va Syracuse Chteta
7:58 (]) CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 (]) e CD LOBOAcarthaftrong
that uses pretty g~tlaasde coya
prompts lobo to masquerade
as e genglartd kingpin to smash
the operetton. (Repeat 60
mins)
CIJ HERITAGE SINGERS
[]J MOVIE · (DRAMA) ••••
"The Godfather" 1972
CIJ!HI CD HAPPYDAYSF onzoo
gallantly takes Jenny Ptcc alo
as hiS bnde m a hllanous mock
ceremony at theJelfer eon Htgh
costume ba ll , only to sulferthe
meet outrageous shock of his
ltfe when the mamage proves/a
be bmdi'li_. (Repeat)
•
()) (!g) WALTER CRON·
KITE'S UNIVERSE CBS News
Spectal Corresponc;tent Welter
Cronkite anchors this science
magazme aenes that examines
phenomena di a c oY ere d
through 8Ctentlfi C actiVIty end
i neprred by human cunosity
CIJ NOVA 'TheAsterotdand the
Dmosaur'For 150mtllion years,
dmosaura domtnated the earth
Then . 65 million years ago they
suddenly vantahed , alongwith a
greatdeal of the planet' sammal
and plant hfe NoYa exammes a
rema rkable new theory abou t
the cause of the cata strophe
( Ciosed -Ca ptron ed,U SA )
(80 mma .)
(ll) APPOINTMENT WITH
DESTINY 'Last Days of John
Dilltngar'
8:30 (]) GOOD NEWS
CIJ !Him LA~ERNE AND
SHIRLEY lenny and SQutggy
tantastze about what a not lite
would be 1f they were stl ent
moYtBstars (Repeai)(Cklsed·
Cepttoned; U.S.A}
D())@l FLO Flo rlskalostng
her home, her In end a and her
money when she sinks all she
has in a flaky avocado deal
(Pari o ne o le two -part
E!_eaenlatton.) (Repeat)
8:58 Cil CBN UPDATE NEWS
11:00 (])DCDHILLSTREETBLUES
Theltghts go ou t and the Htll
Street Pollee steel themselves
tor imminent war when the
President can celsh tatour of I he
p r. ectncl, thereby shattering
the truce amortg the l oca l
Q_!ngs ~ (Fiepeat ; eo mtnl)

He took
it out in
the yard
and buried

BACKHOE and Septic lank
Service. Larry Siden ·
strocker . 675· 5580.

·tr

I .
84

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration
Fuller Electric Co. Com ·
plete rewiring, commercial
or residential, and elec ·
trical maintainance, also
on call . Ph . 446· 2171,
Gallipolis.
Quaillv Cooling and
Heating Service Call 3889698.

WINNIE

SEWING Machine repairs ,. •.'.
service . Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Sorvice. Sharpen
Scissors . Fabri c Shop,
Pomeroy . 992·2284 .

Yf5, DXTOR ...
E!LJT !'17 LIKE 1D
MAKE AN A~ NT·
MfNTFaA
OF MINE.

I HEARD DOCTOR
DEUElL HAP
!iET//ifl), 50 I
IHOJG/IT )IJU M16HT
WANT ME ID6E

11:30
10:00

YOUR C:OCTOR I

JACK'S REFRIGERATIO·
N. air condition service,
commercial . industr ial .
Phone 882-2079 .
Clolus B. Buck ~r. Home •. .-.
and Industrial Sewinli ·~
Machine Repair . Also will · ~
trade or sell old or used '
sewing machtnes. ~hone ·~
304-458 1659 .
·!

=::: :_- :
8_5 _

=--= =-======- ...

. (;e__n~!!l_!l!_u linJL _

JIM'S
DEPENDABLE
water delivery . Call 256·
9368 anytime.

BARNEY

,.

,.

JUST WHAT I
ALWAVS WANTED··

NDW HAULING house coal ~
&amp; limestone for driveways.
Call for estimates 367-7101

A SUNKENTUB!

10:05
10:28
10:30

'•

Jones .Boys Water Service
Call 367·7471 or 367 ·0591.
-- - ·- ·-- ~ ----- ·
DILLAROS
WATER
DELIVERY SERVICE .
Call446·7404 .

-

.. ',
I

,.'
10:58
1t :oo

'•
JONES BOYS WATER -,_..,l ,
SERVICE . Call 367·7471 or
'·
367·0591

--- ·- - .

·- ·-

..
·--- - ',.

~lght Hauling, tree -work,
garage and basement
cleaned out. Call anytime
245-9264. Ask tor Roy, Thurman, OH .
...,

- ------- ----

Mobil"e homes moved ',
llcen!ied, and bohded. 576:
2711 or 475-439&amp;.

.., -- ;;;:;;::;;:::==~~:

WH'f' ELSE WOULD A
BUTTERFLY L.AND ON M'l
NOSE, AND THEN tuRN
INTO AN AN6EL. 7

700C~UB

())@CD THREE'S COMPANY
Wheft 8 wealthy men becomes
o bsessed wtlh maktrtg a
re luctant Cindy hts bride, Jack
and Janet dev1se 8 plot to atop
the ceremony to BIY01d forever
l osi ng theH dear ly beloved
roommate (Repeat) (Closed·
Captioned, U S.A.)
lll ())!laJ MVOLDMANA
po tgnant a tory of a apmted
teenager and her horse I ramer
lather wh o are reuntled alter a
14 year aeparat1on and set out
to explore a new ltfe together
Stars Kriaty McNtchol , Warren
Oates. (2 hra J
()) (j]) MYSTERY! 'Rebecca·
Epiaode IV An tnQueat and a
blackmail attempt lead the de
Wmterato london, where they
uncov er Rebecca's beat ·kept
secret (Closed -Captioned;
u S.A.) (80 mma )
CIJ!IZIB IT'S A LIVING
(]) D CD NERO WOLFE A
woman who sought Nero's help
tn determmmg the source other
young playbo y husband's
tn come 11 slam; Nero goea mto
hiding when his household ia
threatened
(Repeat ; 60
mina.)
CIJ!Him HARTTOHAAT Whole
on ya ca lton althetr aprawhng
c attle ranch , Jonathan and
Jennifer Har t ba co melhe
targeta or a ruthleae c attle
baron who po1sona ran chers'
livestock to drtve them out of
busmesa m a deadly schema to
buy thetr ~and in order to strip
mi ne it (Repeat ,60mina)
(Closed -Captioned, U.S.A.)
CIJSHERLOCKHOLMESAND
DR. WATSON
(ilJ NEWS
()) TIS EVENING NEWS
(]) CBNUPDATENEWS
(]) WEEKEND GARDENER
()) U.S . CHRONICLE II
' Boomtown ' Thiaeegment
prollles Craig, Colorado, an oil
boomtown at the western edge
ol the state, pQmarily focusing
on aoctal problems.
()]) TWILIGHTZONE
(}) CBN UPDATE NEWS

rn • ()) m • Cil !Bl !Hie

N!W8
(}) SOUND OF TRUMPETS
Q0
RACE FOR THI!
PENNANT
•
Cil URIAN LI!AGU! 'S NA·
TIONAL CONVENTION 'New
Strateglea for the Changing
Tlmea' Thia year' a theme
examine• the coneervatlve
mood of the country and 111
impact on Black America , ••
well11 ReaQif''l pollcl11 on
eoclal
and
,International

YEGEL

{])loJOVII-(WIITIIINJ •••
"!11111 filaiMDriiiM" 1173
{j) IINNY HILL IIIOW

!

[1 I I

..... ,... _.. _.. .. -........ .

· -·-

SWEHL

[J I

t
I I XJ

BELEEF

!

~NURYGHI
J I I _

r

Yesterdays

I

THE ONL.'f THIN6
~EVOL-UTIONARY A&amp;oUT

50ME OF Tl-i05E'
NEW CAR' MODEL$.

II

Print answer here:

Now arrange the ctrcled leners to
torm lhe surpr•se answer. as sug·
gesled by the abo"We cartoon

THE

t I XI I I)

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles EXILE PRIME BEHELD FDSSIL
Answer What the boss plumber sa•d about his
Incompetent heiper-l 'l l F IX THAT DRIP

Jumble Book No. Hi, conllinlng 110 puules, rs aYailable lor 51 75 poet~Mid
from Jumble. Clq nus newspaper 8011 l-4, NotWood, N.J. 07648 lncludt your
name, addreu , .1:1p c()(ie and make checks payable lo Newspapettlook.a.

BRIDGE
Careful play helps South
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

NO RTH
+K Q 10
•As
• QJ4
+A Q643

Th e bt dd 1ng
wasn !
perfect. bul a good sm all
slam tn spades was reached
Stx clubs ts a supertor
contract, but this was match
points and North-South b1d
to t he higher scoring siam
West hit upon the best

WEST

1

21-81

EAST
• J 52
• K 10 7 3
t A8753

+ 76

.QJ 942

• 962

lead of th e heart qu een and
South won the ace 1n
dummy
B arri ng a bad
break m either of the black
smts, slam is there as long
as South Isn't careless
Declarer played th e ktng.
queen and ace of spades

+J

• 10 9 2

SOUTH
+ A98&lt;3
• 86
+ K 10
K875

+

Vulnerable . Both
Dealer North

drawing a ll the opponents'
outstandmg trumps Now, as

West

long as clubs were not dlv1d·
ed 4-0 (only a 10 perc ent
chan ce) declarer could
dispose of htS heart loser on
dummy 's fifth club and lose
only one Irick to the diamond ace But South has to
be care ful
South needs to collect ail
ftve club tncks . W e have
already menti oned lhat he
won 't get them if the suit
breaks 4-0. If they break 2-2
they come in automalically,
but 50 percent of the ttme
the suit wtll d1vtde 3- 1.
II i s rather normal pla y
for South to lead a low club
to dummy lo start the suit.
Then back to his ktng and
over to dummy's other honor
for the lhird lead .

North
I+

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

2 NT
3+
s+

Eas t
Pa ss
Pass
Pass
Pass

Openmg lead

,.

South
t+
3+

Pass

•Q

All well and good and an

expert makes what is his
perfect normal play on the
first l ead. He leads either
lhe seven or the eight. Then
after the third club dummy
holds the six - four and
declarer the fl ve. He can
overtake the five to get that

heart disca rd

~t'ldM~f'rr(
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
42 Brought
1" - Ha'i"
toaclose
Bout
43 Adolescent
10 Picnic
DOWN
spoiler
1 Part of
II Mythical
the face
flier
2 Moses'
13 Makeshift
brother
seat
3 Climbmg
vine
\' esterday's Arunrer
15 Gained
16 Mme output 4 Hospice
19 Actor
28 Having
17 Pierworkers 5 - Madre
Markham
a backbone
union
6 Behold 1
20 Sea
31 " - in
18 Belgtan
(Lot.)
monster's
Paradise"
province
7 Coal
coating?
3% RebeUed
20 Actor
by-product 23 Schedu.le 34 Wee bit
•
Pickens
8 Auto home 24 Set aside 3a U.S. Treasury
21 Seraglio
9 Sketch
25 Commute
agent
chamber
12 Mariner
by rail
38 Mouthful
22 Leaping - 14 Dutch
2&amp; Going
of gum
23 Playing
cheese
to court
39 Traitor
field
2&amp; Lorelei
27 Oassy guy
2&amp; Amowrt
29Town
near Padua
30 Michelangelo work
33 Ending for
part or vint

s

34 Marie
Dressler
role
l5 Table scrap
37 P!Bce to
enlertain
guests
40 Fly

1=+--1-

41 Vase

handle

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
II

how to work
AXVDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

It:

One letler simply stands for another. In this sample A II
used lor the lhree L's. X for the two
etc. Single letters.
. apoolrophea. the leneth and lormation o r lhe words are an·
hinll. Earh day lhe rode lellers are ditlerenl.

o·s,

CRVPTOQUOTES

ilautl.

11:01 -GALLIRY
11:21
IN UPDATI HI WI
11:30
TMITOIIIGHTIIIOW
GuHII: SuzannePieohetle, Dr.
Rooen Allman and opere·
oi!'Oinil ~rrot. Nino. (110 mlno.)
(I) AIIOTMIII UFI

by Henn fvnold and Bob Lft

Unscramble these tour Jumbles.
one tetter to each square, to form
four ordinary words

!V!NING

Home building, home •
remodeling and re pair .
Custom work from start to
fonish. Call 388·8711.

LOCKSMITH
Service .
Residential, automotive .
Emergency service. Call
882-2079 .

ftfl\l~ fi»'il ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ~

JULY21, tll81

BRICK. BLOCK, AND
STONE WOR K . Call 256-6735.

1980 Yahama 650 specia l
bla ck and gofd,
low
mileage, runs good Phone
304-773 -5096.

75

1976 Pontiac Grand Pn x.
Exc. cond., low mileage,
loaded wilh e!i'tras. Phone
446 7136.

FERRELL's
WINDON
GLASS SERVICE Homo
ma in1alnance
and ...
remodeling . Phone 388·
9326.

1978 Kawasaki LTD 1,0000,
$2,000. Excellent condlllon .
Phone 304·675-5079 .

76

-

Lar ge clea n bales of straw ,
S1 SO .
675 5 180

AutosforS~Ie

&amp; vegetables

Television
•
•
VIewmg

carpenter work, any typeremodeling . call 446·2910 . . , .

Gene's carpel Cleaning,
deep stream extraction .
Free estimates, reasonable
ra tes. Scothguard, 992·6309.

r;===~~;::::::==r;:=~~~~~~===167'5·5504.
====:::==:===::::~==

--·......
........... . ...
...
COMES
# 4RVEST

Motorcycles

74

•

._

197S Chevy Scollsdale 4
wheel drive . am·fm, Phone
675·6923.

LOdi apples, exc . for sauce
&amp; eat ing F ttzpatri ck Or
chards, St. Rt 689 Phone
669·3785 Hrs . 10 a.m .·7
p.m .

'·· · .. r · ~

'\

75 Dodge sportsma n van
$1250. Phone 304-675-2885.

-

Sleeping room , middle·
aged white female, bet·
ween 3·5 p.m . 675·1060.

For rent, lOx 50 2 bedroom
mobile home. Racine area.

12JCeG trailer In Syracuse,
air cond., washer and
drver. Call992·2897.

i h

1V

C\'\~

EASY credtt available now
to purchase furniture ,
televisions, or appliances.
Vi II age Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave ., 675-1773.

- - - - -- - Cann ing tomatoes Andrew
Cross . Letart Falls. Ohio.

l t3~ J :;':''-- \

Trailer for rent in Rio
Grande, S1SO per mo plus
uti lities, $150 deposit. Call
388·8508.

2 bedroom Mobile HOmo in
Racine. sm. month, $75.
dePOSit. Pay own ulllitlos.
361·7111 .

yoo Josr
71""/!!N~ I'Me.J· . . .......
(He OWl ~~ __.

~=========Jl;;;;;~~~;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:~~;.J

T RAILER spaces for rent .
Southern Va I ley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh .
992·3954 .

.

W6V.. W+IY

DICK TRACY

1981

KIT 'N' CARLYLE"'
by Larry Wright 73 ' V•ns&amp;4W.D.
r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . ; . _ . . . ; . _ . . . ; " " 1 1 1 9 7 6 Ford Window Van.
Dclt)''f
=~~-lei tires $2,200. Call

HILLCREST KENNEL
Board1ng a l l breeds , c lea n
1ndoor-outdoor fa c il1t1 es
A lso AKC Reg
Dober
mans Call446 7795

2 bdr unfum apt, Main
- ~- ~- St , V tn ton
Clean con Refngerator . S50 Ca ll 367
ven 1ent 1ocat1on. sec dep , 7824
5145 mo Call245 581 8

Cheshire, Oh Phone 1-304773· 5882.

2 bedroom trailer for rent.
Brown's Trailer Park . 992·
3324.

54
Misc. Merchandise
AIR CONDITIONERS
sale priced. all sizes In
stock, expert installat ion
available . Vtllage Furniture, 2605 Jackson A'Ve ,
304-675-1773.

' HAY

46

For rent 2 bdr trailer Call
«6 7334.

-

Mtsc- Merchandise
-

RATLIFF POD L S &amp; SER
VICE . Complete sa les , ser v •ce . supp l tes and in
stallafton 446 13 24 .

2 bdr. trailer Roush Lane,

unfurn ., 2 bdr . trailer for
rent . Ca ll446·3371

Household Goods

Ohio

11

Sentinel-

NKS
NJYO

TZLSYSDN
XH

YXSD

DX\'SHTS

E;

zs

JQNSH
ZJUSZN

X 0
D N S I S H D J H~ Yeaterday'a Cryptoquote: 1HE NIGHTINGAlE GOT NO
PRIZE AT1HEPOULTRYSHOW.--8IR ~TER RALEIGH.,

Y J 'L

•

•••

�I

12

Pomeroy

Th e Daily S e ntinel

Middl e o r t , Ohio

California produce rolls in Texas today unhindered
WS GATOS, Calif . i API California produce rolled unhinder ed mto Texas today a lter a
federal judge temporarily lilted a
qua rantine im posed by the Lone
Star State m response to Cali!orma's
problems with fruit rues.
California laywers, meanwhile,
we re preparing to ask the U.S.
Supreme Court, posSl bly today, to
halt sinu lar stringent quarantines
that also went into effect Monday in
F lorida, South Carolina, Mississippi
a nd Alabama.
A&gt; helicopters completed the f1rs t
daytime ae rial spraying of the
pe s tiCide
mala t hion
Mon day
southeast of Sa n Francisco, state officials expan ded the spraying target
zone to 2n square nules from 1 7~
sq uare n11l es to ba ttle mfestati on.s of
Medite rranean fruit flies .
The next acn al assa ult on the
flies, whi ch destroy about 200
vanelies of frUJ!.'i and vegeta bles, Ill el uding pt•ppers . toma toes and
peaches. JS scheduled to start Wednesda¥.
In Dalla s, US . D1strirt Judge
P&lt;i trick Ht gg mbotham gra nted a
temporary restnunmg order sought

by a coalition of California growers,
lifting the Texas quarantine. His order came after trucks laden with
fruit; a nd vegetables were stopped
a t Texas roadblocks to check to see
that pr oduce wa s fwnigated or
grown in areas free of infestation. A
court heanng on a pennanent injunction is set lor Saturday .
" We removed the roadblocks. but
we a re shll tem bly concerned the
Med it er ran e an fruit fly is
spreading." said Texas Agriculture
Commissione r Reagan Brown . " I
have_ a bsolutel y done everything I
can to protect Texas interests. Now
it is out of my hands."
Tony Cimarust1, an aide to Califorma Attorney General George DeukmeJ ia n, sa id Monday night the
stale's laywers we re preparing to go
to Washington today to seek action
from the U.S . Supreme Court on the
quarantines in the other four
Southern slates. which fear the hny
ny may spread to their cro~ .
Ca liforma and the federal government have sought to assure the
stales the medfly outbreak is confined to three San Franc1sco Bay
area counties a nd doesn't a ffect

commercial !arms. The federal
government already has its own
quarantine in effect in the three
counties.
Before issuing his ruling, Higginbotham was told by a U.S. Department of Agriculture attorney in
Washington that the department
was " on the verge" of issuing a
proposal that would extend the
~unty
federal quarantine
over the entire state.
But Harvey Ford, deputy administrator for USDA's AnimalPlant Health Inspection Service,
said he had merely made a technical
change Monday, one that would not
affect the quarantine area. He said
the area would not be expanded
unless new medfly finds were made.
The first medflies were found a
year ago in Santa Clara County. An
intensive ground-based eradication
effort started in January, but more
maggots were found this swruner.
Gov . Edmund G. Brown J r. reluctantly ordered aerial s praying two
weeks ago after U.S. Agriculture
Secretary John Block threatened a
statewide quarantine.
·

Senate offers special tax relief
1\'ASHI:\ t; TO:\
Sl'na h:

!S ()ff t'rliJ ~

• AP 1

The

speCi al tax relief

1{1 nearly 70 nullwn couples and in-

dJ\'Jcluab 'r\h() J,.:tve to chanty but
don't Jt e m iZL' the1r de duct ions .
Starting next Yt';Jr. s uch taxpaye rs

would he allowed tu deduct a shar e
uf the1 r cuntnbutiUn s a nd still cla im
th e standard dl'd uctJOn .
The p rO\' IS JOil . sponsort-ri by Sens.
Bob Packwood. H-O re. and Danie l
Patn ck ~ oymhan. [).N Y.. wa.s
adopted nn a 9i- 1 n Ht• Monday a nd,
with tht&gt; suppurt qf the Reaga n adm tmstr&lt;tt tun. adclt'd tu the Se nate"s
wx-&lt;.:ut pl ~n1

The

&lt;.Hirmnt~tratwn

ongi nall y

foug ht l•ffort.'"l to put tht• iJTTiendment
un tht' klX bi!l but ga \·t· Ul afte r more

than ha lf the senators announced
s upporl of lhe proposal Only Sen
S.l Hayakawa. R-Calif., voted
aga inst the amendme nt. s.:~y m g 1t
fl i e~ m the fdC(' of pfftlrts to s implify
the tax la\\'S .
Meanwhi le. a behmd-the-scenes

battl e 1_•un ttnued tn the Sena te and
thr HousL' Wa\'.'i and Means over how
to cut t;JXP.'i 011 lhc oil ind ustry
Dermx.Tattc lt&gt;ader.'i of the House

and Republica ns a re bidding for the
votes of conservative oil-state
Democrats for their respective taxcut bills .
P resident Rea gan started the bidding two months ago when he offered a tax credit of up to $2,500 for
owners of land from which oil is
pumped . Democrats, who control
the Ways and Means Committee ,
matched that ol!er. The Republicancontrolled Senate Finance Committee added another sweete ner :
cutting in half the " windfall-profits"
tax on newly discovered oil.
Sens . Uoyd Bentsen, D-Texas, and
Da vid Boren, D-Okla. , are urging
the Senate to expand further the tax
break for the oil industry. Their
amendment would exempt from the
" windfa ll" tax the first 1,000 barrels
of oil pumped each day by independent producers. They also
may seek a better break for owners
of oil-productng land.
Under active consideration 10 both
houses is a proposal to repeal the
" windfall" tax on all newly
discovered oil .
The Senate-passed amendment

a llowing a special deduction for
charitable contributions would cost
nearly $5 billion over the next fiv e
years . Unlike most of the Senate bill
which has been embraced b;
Reagan , the amendment would
favor low-and middle-income taxpayeJ-s: 80 percent of the tax relief
for contributions would go to those
with incomes less than $30,000 a
y~r .

Present law allows a person to
avo1d tax on a Jinuted amount of
charitable contributions. But the
deduction is available only i( deductiOns are itemized. Unless a single
person has deductiOns totaling $2,300
or more for medical expenses, state
taxes and the like, the standard
deduction is applied. The break-even
point for a couple is deductions of
$3,400.
In 1978, the last year for which
data is available, 211 .7 percent ot a ll
tax returns iterruzed deductions.

l\larket report
Ohio Valley Uve5tock C&lt;1 .
Pn~

J udge Ammer may file suit
CIHCl .EVII.IJ·: . Oluo 1 AP 1 - A yea r.
l'wkilway County judge says he'll
Judges are authorized under s tale
s m.· county conurussioners 1f they la w to order funds to operate their
duo' t &lt;Jppropna te fu nds for 10 per- courts.
l"L' rl t cust-of-llv mg pay ra tses for em·
" II they don't act, then I've got
pl uyees in three county agencies.
two alternatives ," Anuner sa1d
('ouunon Pl eas Judge Wil liam Monda y. " One is hold them m conAmmer unkred the cotrunJSS!Oners tempt. but I propose to file a manto boos t th\:' cu rrent Ludgets of his damus suit in the court of appeals
,·uur·L thl' s henff"s department and for all three offices .
the prose cuttng attorney's uffi ce b;
" As I point out in the orde r , the
:~bout $J:I.700 bv Thursday .
other two offices are both ancilllary
CommJ s:--t oner Don Strous ha d no and necessary to the court .··
llli! JH'dl&lt;:f tt• cnmrnent on the orde r.
bu t the p;inel lllcllcated durmg
The judge ordered corruruss10ne rs
rrl' l llll l !lil r~· Fl82 hudgt'l h eCI rings
to provide another $3,109 for pay
la st wt:' t'k that thl'Y expect t o Ue out hikes in his court, which was apIll m uncy b.\· the end of th1s yea r .
propriated $110.466 for lh1s year' s
Thuugh cd l t.&gt;lected off1 cers budget.
requested h1 glwr b u dge~ next yea r.
The s heriff' s office lias a 1981
c umrm~ s t ontrs L"Ut the 1981 budgets
budget of $462,533 from the general
by J per&lt;.Tnt. Funding fo r some non- fund , plus $170,000 from federal
elcrtrd il~enc1e s was slashed by up revenue-sharing funds . The latter is
to 50 prrcc nt. and at least one county used for salaries, retirement and
uperat iun may be s uspended next workers' compensation programs .
'

Marktt Rr por1
laken from the ;~ucl l tm nf Sa turda y,

Jul y 1&amp;. Trt&gt;nds : Veal ca lves ste ady. Cows

steady . Feeder catlle S2-&lt;l lower. Total head 47() .
Fffiler stee rs Good and Choice 250 to 300 lbs
sc:J.S3; 300 to 400 lbs. 48-~ . «10 to 500 lbs . 51-.59: [iOO
to 600 lbs. 51-60 : 600 tu 700 lbs . ta-55 .30: 700 to 800
lbs. 4$. 50-:i2.:JO; 800 and Ovt&gt;r U-57 .
Feeder Heifers: Good and Choice 2S() to 300 lbs.
42 .50-53: 300 [() 400 lbs. 44-52 : 400 to 500 lbs . 41 -~ :
500 tu600 lbs . 4+51 : 600 to 700 lbs. 42 .5()...48 : 700 to
800 lbs. 43-46 .30: 800 and ove r ID-45.
F'et&gt;der Bulls: Good and Choice Z.SO to J.OO lbs.
48-37 : JOO to 400 lbs . 50-53 : 400 ttl 500 Ills . ~56 . :.0 :
500 tn 600 lbs. 47 . ~ : 600 t o 700 lbs . «-51 . 700 to
1100 Jbs. 4Z-48 : 800 and over"«H5.
Holstem steers and bulls 300 to 1100 lbs . +4-57
Bulls 1.000 lb..'\. ontl up~
Slaughter co.,.,. s .- utilities 38-45.50 : ca nners
and euttt&gt;rs 40 down

•

Spnn~ e r cows

- b\· the head ~330
Cows ttnd calv t-s b)· Lhe h~ml37~
Vt-al r alves - choiC"e and prur~t? 60-70: MOOd 5I).

"'·" hogs

B&lt;lbr cal ves !i0-8.S
Tep
210 to Z30 47. 5(}...49 . ~

Boa rs ~ 2 . 5()
PIKS- bY thl' head JG-2:1 .
Sows wo'lb.'i. and up 43~

WASHINGTON (API - The Democratic-controlled
House Ways and Means Committee completed work
early today on the largest tax cut In history after offering to compromise with President Reagan on
reducing Individual taxes in three consecutive years.
The conunittee voted to allow the third-year tax cut
only if inflatiOn, interest rates and the federal deficit
are reduced to. the levels forecast by tbe Reagan administration for 1983. The proposal was rejected by the
president's advisers.
The conunittee plan also would give a bigger share of
tax relief to families earning Jess than $50,000 a year.
While the House panel was rushing to finish work in
time for floor action before the August recess, Senate
debate bogged down &lt;&gt;n a tax bill to Reagan 's liking.
Uberal Democrats were trying to block a vote on a
Republican proposal to cut oil-industry taxes a bout $20
billion over the n~rl decade.
The Senate bill gives Reagan the full three-year, 25
percent, acr~ss-the-board cut in personal rates that he
asked. The two sure years of the House plan would cut
,t axes an average 15 percent.
The Joint Committee on Taxation estimates that

•

FRUIT STOP - Texas State Department of
Agriculture officials began checking trucks entering
the state at El Paso on Monday, checking for fruit from

Grant deadline near
The Ohio Board of Regents has set
an Aug. 21 deadline for applications
from the Ohio instructional grant.
Anyone interested in enrolling or
applying for these ~rants should do
so by Aug. 20.

Special session
Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM will
meet in special session this evening
at 7 p.m . There will be work in E.A.
degree. All members are asked to
attend .

Weese in hospital
Mrs . Carl (Grace ) Weese,
Syracuse, is a patient at Holzer
Medical Center. Her room number is
412 . Cards may be sent to her in care
of the hospital.

. mvenary pageaat. &lt;AP Laserplloto 1.

Calllornia that may have been Infested
Medlterranea!l fruit flies . (AP Laserphoto I·

Emergency runs
The Meigs County Emergency
Medea! Ser vice made seven
emergency runs Monday and early
Tuesday morning.
Ted Coppic, Hamilton, was
treated by the Middleport squad at
1:50 a .m ., but was not transported.
At 1:55 p.m . the Middleport squad
took James McClain from Route 143
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Nellie Price was taken !rom
Second Avenue to Veterans
Memorial Hospital at 2:211 p.m.
The Middleport squad also trasnsported Carolyn Triplet from North
Third to Veterans Memorial
Hospital at 11 :03 p.m .
At 1:41 a.m . Larry Wehring was
taken from Uncoln Heights to

•

e

~y

bill Thursday , which would send it to the House lor
debate ne~t week .
The Senate has been debating Reaga n's plan for a
week.
The latest snag was the oil-tax amendment, which
would gradually exempt all newly discovered oil from
the 1980 " windfall-profits" tax. Finance Committee
Chainnan Bob Dole, R-Kan., who proposed the amendment, said the e~emption would spur increased expi oration and production of domestic oil.
Uberal Democrats were especially upset that
Republicans were pushing relief for the oil industry
only a few hours after the Senate rejected an effort to
retain a $122 minimum monthly Social Security benefit
for 3 million people.
Tax breaks lor the oil industry have become the
currency used by Democratic leaders and the Reagan
administration to woo oil-state lawmakers, who could
hold the swing votes on whether the president's tax-cut
plan or the Democratic version becomes law.
The House committee, working past midni ght
Tuesday , agreed to about $6.4 billion worth of special
tax cuts for the oil industry over the next f1ve years.

Reagan's across-the-board reduction would give taxpayers with incomes betweenS15,000 and $20,000 a year
an average 24.5 percent cut in ta~es between this Oct. I
!jnd the end of 1984, compared witb 28.8 percent under
the House bill . The average reduction in the $50,000-t&lt;&gt;$l00,000 bracket wOuld be 25.7 percent in Reagan 's plan
and 21 .7 percent in the House version.
A working couple with · two children and earning
$30,000 a year would realize a $1,142 tax cut from 1981
through 1984 from the Ways and Means Corrunittee bill,
compared witli $1,079 in Reagan's plan. The figures
assume economic conditions would allow the third in·
stallment of the tax reduction.
Either bill would start cutting personal taxes on Oct.
I.
In addition to cutting tax rates, the House bill would
reduce the "marriage penalty" fa ced by many tw&lt;&gt;eamer couples, raise the standard deduction, boost the
eamed-income credit for poor working families , increase tax incentives for savings, repeal estate taxes
for all but a handful of the wealthiest families and slash
business taxes.
The committee plans to give formal approval to the

at

Voi.JO,No.69

WASHINGTON (AP I - President
Reagan, accusing Democrats of
playing " on the fears of many
Americans" to keep the minimum
monthly Social Security benefit,
says he will go on national television
to set the record straight.
The House was considering a
resolution today by Democratic
leader Jim Wright of Texas to
preserve the $122 minimum monthly
Social Security benefit. In the
Senate, Michigan Democrat Donald
Riegle was pressing for an amendment to the pending tax bill that actually would restore the benefit.
Outside, the National Council of
Senior Citizens was s cheduled to
hold a rally on the Capitol steps to
protes t proposed cuts in Soc1al

RiO de Janeiro; and Miss Belgium
Dorrunique Van Eeckhoudt , 20 , of
Brussels.
The 12 judges for the contest, including Brazilian soccer star Pete.
fashion photographer Francesco
Scavullo and actor Lee Majors.
JUdged the beauties throughout the
week in three ways - swimsuit competition, evening gown competition
and personal interviews.
E a rly in the evening they
na rrow e d ihe field to 12
semifinalists. Besides the fi ve
finalists . they included contestants
from Holland , Ecuador . New
Zealand, Norway , Germany, Tahiti
and the United States. Miss U.S.A. is
Kim Seelbrede , a 20-year-old model
from Gennantown, Ohio .
The Venezuelhn ambassador to
the United States, Alberto Martini
Urdaneta , who came on stage after
Miss Venezuela won her title, said,
" It is a very happy day for all the
country and for all the people. All of
Venezuela is with her." He noted
that it was the second Miss
Venezuela to be chosen Miss Universe in three years .

BRINGS SAVINGS . MEN'S and BOYS' WEAR
• SUMMER JACKETS
• BOYS' SHIRTS
• MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS
•BOYS' SHORTS
• DRESS SlACKS
•SWIM TRUNKS
• DRESS SHIRTS
· •sPORT SHIRTS

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Security .
"I deplor e the opportunistic
political maneuvering, cynically
designed to play on the fears of
many Americans, that some in the
Congress are initiating at this lime,"
Reagan said in a letter to Senate
Majority Leader Howard H. Baker
Jr., R-Tenn . " These efforts appear
designed to explOit an issue rather
than find a solution to the urgent
Social Security problem ."
In the letter released Monday, the
president said he will request
television lime " as soon as possible"
to " tell the American people the facts ."
"During this address, I will call on
the Congress to lay aside partisan
politics and join me in a constructive
effort to put Social Security on a permanently sound financial bas is as
soon as the 97th Congress returns in
September," Reagan added.
House Speaker Thomas P. O' Neill
Jr ., D-Mass ., responded by
questioning Reagan's commitment
to protecting benefits for current
Social Security recipients .
Budget-cutting measures passed
separately by both houses of

enttne
Mail costs will go up

Avert postal strike
WASHINGTON (APl - The tentatlve three-year contract that
headed off a nationwide mail strike
shouldn' t push the cost of a firstclass stamp beyond the 20 cents
already sought by the Postal Service , Postmaster General William
F . Bolger says.
Bolger estimated the pact, hammered out Tuesday after 30 hours of
almost non-stop bargaining, would
cost the Postal Service $4.8 billion. It
would give the half-million members
of the two largest postal unions
about a 10 percent pay raise- $900
apiece more in base wages and
~bout $1,200 in bonuses - plus
unlimited protection against inflation and rising health benefit
premiums .
In announcing the settlement nine
.10urs after an earlier agreement fell
apart when words were put into
writing, Bolger took the occasion to

Vt-lerans Memorial
Admitted Media Schrinver,
Ruthnd ; Frieda Buchanan, Lower
Bottom; Jane McClain, Pomeroy;
Nellie Pr~ce, Middleport ; Richard
Blessing, Pomeroy .
Discharges Zelda Davis ,
Thelma Eblin , Trenton Qualls, John
Metzger, Leah Williams.

-

. .BANK ONE ..-....

LEASING .
=EQUIPMENT

TO BUSIMESS.IMDUSTRY,
- -AND THE PROFESSIONS

POSTAL SETI'LEMENT - Postmaster General
WWlam Boljler, center, faces reporters In Washington
~Y.-:!~.ytncenj Sombrotto, lef!.. P.fe!lldeqt of the
Natl01111l Assoelatlon of Letter Carriers and Moe Biller,

president of the American Postal Workers Union. They
answered questions about the settlement that avoided
a strike by half a million postal workers. ( AP Laserphoto).
"

ToDAY

Charge Libyan in murder case

Proposal against missiles

LOOK LOOK
.
TWICE SALE
'

.

American Postal Workers Union,
predicted the contract will be
ratified .
While _ the unions di~'t get
e~erythmg they wanted, we feel
•t s a good contract and that the
membership will approve it," Biller
said.
.
Vmce Sombrotto of the Natto~l
AssOCiation of Letter Camers sa1d
the ra!tftcattOn process Will take
about 30 days .
In separate negotiations, the
National Rural Letter Carriers
Association, which represents about
63,000 . employees, also agreed to a
lentattve contract Tuesday. Terms
were not announced.
.
Representatives Of the mail ~,_
dlers division _or the Laborers Int~rnat1onal Urn on broke off talks but
said thetr 40,000 members Will stay
on the job while _unresolved iss~es
are submitted to bmdmg arbitratiOn.

,.
•

WASHINGTON CAP! - Political
fallout from President Reagan's
Social Security reductions is raining
on Republican lawmakers, who
abandoned on• proposed cutback in
the House while narrowly salvaging
it in the Senate.
GOP senators and representatives
are extremely nervous about having
to defend any plan that calls for
trimming Social Securtly benefits.
top Republican congressional
leaders concede .
Democrats , meanwhile , are
rapidly mobilizing behind the Social
Security issue as part of their 1982
congressional comeback strategy.
" We 're putting their feet to the

••• IN THEW

OGDEN, Utah ,- A Ubyan arrested while trying to leave the United ·
States has been'cjlarged with killing a countryman who was resisting a
-return to Ubya.
The FBI said Tuesday one federal agent and two Chicago policemen
interviewed Mohamad A. Shabata lor three hours. Shabata was picked
up Friday on a second-degree murder warrant as he stepped from an
airplane in Chicago. Police said he was carrying $3,300 in cash and had
plane reservations lor Libya.
The Utah warrant was i~ued hours after the bullet-riddled body of a
man wearing a ring and clothes belonging to Nabil A. Mansour was
found in the trunk of Mansour's car.
·

..

plug the Postal Service's request to
raise the first-class mall rate from
18 cents to 20 cents .
But he said he thought 20 cents,
tw1ce rejected by the Postal Rate
Commission would be enough ·'for a
couple of ye~rs."
Higher labor costs can be offset by
increased productivity, Bolger expla ined, noting that the settlement
includes $350 in productivity bOnuses
for each worker in each year of the
contract.
.; Postal officials had estimated
their first offer, linuting cost-ofliving raises to an average 5 percent
a year and freezing base pay, would
have increased mail rates 3 cents by
1982. They had said union demands
for 14.7 percent annual wage and
cost-of-living raises, a :!a-hour week
and a lOth holiday would have forced
a 45-cent stamp by 1984.
Moe Biller, president of the

(I

''

Political fallout showers lawmakers
fire ," House Speaker Thomas P .
O'Neill Jr .. D-Mass. , said Of the
Republicans. " We're going to keep
on the issue."
But House Republican Leader
Rober,! H_. Michel says: .. If anyone
thinks they are going to ride that
Social Security issue to political
paradise at our expense. they have
another thing coming. "
As 5,000 elderly people protested
on the Capitol steps Tuesday, the
GOP-controlled Senate killed a
Democratic move to preserve the
$122 minimum Social Security
benefit Reagan wants lrinuned. The
largely party-line vote was ~2-46 .
" The question is whe ther

Congress is going to Jose its nerve,"
Finance Committee Chairman Bob
Dole , R-Kans., said in urging
colleagues to stand by the earliersanctioned reduction .
In the House, meanwhile,
Republicans abandoned the administration 's position in droves to
join Democrats in supporting , 40513. a non-binding resolution urging
restoration of the minimum benefit.
Reagan is aware of the political
woes his Social Security proposal is
causing Republican lawmakers,
especially in the House, and will
seek to defuse the issue in a
nationally broadcast address, according to administratiOn and

congressional sources.
The sources said the speech
probably will come late next week,
hefore Congress takes its annual
August recess.
One top House Republican who
asked not to be identified said the
Social Security cuts "will be the hotlest issue of the 1982 elections ."
" We didn't want our members to
have to walk the plank just to help
the Democrats score points," he
said. " We're trying to make up
ground we 've already lost on this
issue: " said one top House
Republican who also asked not to be
identified .

Cheshire man hurt in Meigs accident
A Cheshire man was injured in a
one-car accident in Meigs County
Tuesday night .
Frederick D. Thomas, !9, was not
treated at the scene for his injuries,
according to the Gallia-Meigs Post
of the state highway patrol.
The patrol said Thomas was westbound on CR 5 at 10:30 p.m. when he
swerved to avoid collision with a

TilE HAGUE, Netherlands - Three key political leaders plan to offer their parties a proposal for a new center-left coalition government
which would lean strongly against stationing new U.S. nuclear
missiles in Holland.
Approval of tbe proposal drafted Tuesday after two months of
negotiations wOuld allow foi'JTiation of a new three-party coalition
reOecting the outcome of the May 26 national election. The parties'
parliamentary deh!gations began debating the program later

Tuesday.
Christian Democratic Premier Andries van Agt would return as
head of a government including the Labor Party and the smaller
Democrats 1966.

deer. He lost c ontrol of his vehicle ,
went off the left side of the road,
struck an embankment and overturned .
Thomas' vehicle was severely
damaged and no citation was 1ssued.
The plltrol cited a driver in a tw&lt;&gt;car collision in Gallia County
Tuesday morning.
The repnrt said a car driven by

Russ~ll A. Arthur, 61, Sedalia , was
unable to stop and hit the rear of a
stopped car driven by Robert D.
Herdman II , 17, Gallipolis, onSR 160
at !0:20a .m .
Herdman was attempting a left
turn when the crash occurred.
Moderate damage was reported to
Arthur's vehicle and slight to Herdman's car. Arthur was cited for

assured clear distance.
No injury was reported in a onecar wreck in Meigs County later in
the day.
Lewis E . Zele, 23, Euclid, was
westbound on SR 124 at 4: 10 p.m .
when he went off the right side of the
road, lost control and hit an embankment, causing moderate
damage.

Averts major fire

BANK ONE QF POMEROY. N.A

614/992·2133

1 Section , 12 Pages
1S Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 22,1981

Copyrighted 1981

Veterans Memorial Hospital by the
Pomeroy squad. She was later transferred to St. Joseph's Hospital.
Annette Lambert was transported
from Brook Street to Holzer Medic~ I
Center at I :45 p.m . by the Rutland
squad .
The Pomeroy squad took Floyd
Burney from Route 33 to Holzer
Medical Center at 7:16 a .m .
Tuesd_a y .

Congress and endorsed by the administration would eliminate· the
minimum monthly benefit, which
goes to 3 million Americans.
By agreement, House-Senate conference working out differences in
the two budget bills are not to drop
features in both bills.
Wright's non-binding resolution
" strongly urges that the nece~ry
steps be taken to insure that Social
Security benefits are not reduc~ for
those currently receiving them."
Riegle 's amendment would mandate resoration of the benefit.
Baker said the president Is
" aware of all the flap" over
elirrunalion of the minimum benefit
and is trying to cut down pa~tisan
bickering over the issue.
But Baker, who met with Reogan
last Saturday, told reporters Monday that he has "no indication
whatever the administration has
changed lis position on the minimum
•benefit."
The administration has argued
that other benefit programs will
take care of those who nee&lt;J the
m1n1mum payment, while
elirrunating it will save $7 billion
over the next f1ve

That's $300 million more than recommended by the
Senate Finance Committee.
The House bill wOuld reduce individual and busineaa
taxes by about $640 billion wer the next five yean,
assuming inflation does not allow a third-year reduotion. The Senate bill is worth $695 bi!Uon.
House Democrats have fought Reagan's three--year,
across-the-board plan for six montha. They argue that
a commitment now reaching into 1984 risks higher inflation, and they insist that an extra share of relief be
eannarked for low-and middle-income families, who
suffer most from inflation and rising Social Security
taxes.
Knowing in advance that the administration would
accept no conditions, the Ways and Means Committee
agreed to allow a third year of tax cuts, starting Jan. I,
1984, only if inflation is cut in late 19113 to the 6 percent
range and if the government deficit and interest rates
are reduced to levels forecast by the White HOUBe.
The vote on that amendment was 23-12. Rep. Kent
Hance, D-Texas, sided with Republicans against the
amendment ; Rep. Richard Schulze, R-Pa., voted with
Democrats for it.

•

President will explain situation

ELBERFELD$
JULY CLEARANCE SALE

ON TOP OF mE WORlJ&gt; - lreDe ~ez Collde, 11, of C.aracas,
Vmeaaela 1r1et oa ber crowa after slle wu selected as lbe new Mils
Ualvene olltllln New York Monday lllpt at the competition's 30111 an-

•

Meigs County happenings.·••

Miss Conde chosen Miss Universe •
NEW YORK IAPl - Irene Saez
Conde had watched the Miss Universe pageant since she was a ch1ld, and
she had always dreamed of being
named the most beauliful woman in
the world.
Miss Conde's dream came true
Monday mght whe n, as Miss
Venezuela, she was crowned Miss
Universe 1981.
The 19-year-old civil-engineering
student from Caracas said the first
thing she did when she learned she
had won the pageant was to thank
God. Miss Conde won more than
$100,000 tn cash and prizes along
with her title, including a Mazda
RX-7 automobile. a sport boat ,
jewelry, a mink , a wardrobe a nd
$20,000 cash .
Miss Venezuela was among 76 contestants. There had been 77, but Miss
Mauritius got homesick and went
home Sunday. according to Steve
Solomon, a spokesman lor the
pageant.
The five runners-up were, in order, Miss· Canada, Dominique
Dufour, 22, of Toronto; Miss
Sweden, Eva Lundren, 19 of Pitea ;
Miss Brazil Adriana Olveira. 20, of

DemoCrats finish tax hill work

A fire that could have caused
severe damage was quickly brought
Wider control by the l'vfiddleport Fire
Department Tuesday.at 5:43p.m .
Actording to Middleport police,, a
car driven by Carlos M. ~c1(night,
lu. 1, Middleport, pulled into the
Mobil Gas Station, comer~ R~tland
and North
Secilnd Streets,• when the
Jl,
hose to a gas pwnp ca~ght on the
front bumper. The hose ·was pulled
loose, ignited, and burned. A second
p~p received damage . No injuries
were report~. '
'

Demands life imprisonment .
ROME - The pf'O!Iecution demanded MehmerAli Agca be jailed for
life today for shooting Pope .!ohn Paul Il1 calling the Turkish terrOrist ·
"a man of hate, II man ofvlolence,li man of ~~~~peralion . "
·Prosecutor Nicolo Amato.asked ·for ihe 'llllilQmwn penalty against ·
the. ~year-pld lieaf(!ed defendant , who' bo,y~t~ the trial today to
~ being tried Ill Italy:
' .
.
'
l\g~ ~dmitted to the Italian court at the openihg of the trial Monday
lie shot the pope in St..Peter's Square on M~y 13.

I

&lt;

•

Givt~n

'

-

prison tern'!

Terry ~ Lee Brewer, .Racine,
·pleaded guilty to attempted arson in .
Meigs' Collntl' c~oo Plllil~ t:ilort .,
Tuesctayltft~moon.'~. • · ,.
·· ·
'
· Juclgel Jolin c, ~COli Sente~
him _to sli months, to five yea!'l m
' ~tate prison, ~~~

.w.MetRI

· •··~m
· '~~ter
,
4:
·

!red ~-

~

~·

Brewer wu lnCueted July 3 after
au...-, eet fire to a trn ·

he

~ piek~ tniCii on

qro.,llld.

.

.....,..,. J.
,\tfAIIiJWcl

J!fay

.

4,

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'

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.
'
.
BEGIN REPAIR'ON MABON BOAT RAMP-Tlle Corp of EIIIIDeen frem tile HllldlqtM Dlltrld .....
....... ~ ~nlly ee Ute ·belli nm~ at !ife Ma1011 levee. Aee• . . . to
Daile7; "qtn,e·a..-. ·
'fecllllelu wlllltlle HUll~ ~Iatric!, 1100 tou el 1toae will be bna&amp;ht
anud tile ....,. ..._.,. ·
w1lft 11 111e l'llilp li eqieded \0 ltake lrom tllree to four claya.(Photo by Tim Davia.)
~· ·

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